# Impact of social alienation on self-care ability in rural older adults through psychological resilience and subjective wellbeing

**Authors:** Qi Sun, Suning Shi, Shixue Zhou, Zhaoquan Jiang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2026.1748206 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-01-30

## TL;DR

The study finds that social alienation reduces self-care ability in rural older adults, partly through reduced psychological resilience and well-being.

## Contribution

This paper identifies multiple mediating pathways linking social alienation to self-care ability in rural empty-nest older adults.

## Key findings

- Social alienation has a strong direct negative effect on self-care ability (β = -0.678).
- Psychological resilience mediates 35.89% of the effect of social alienation on self-care ability.
- Combined psychological resilience and well-being mediate an additional 3.99% of the effect.

## Abstract

The present study is intended to examine the multiple mediating roles of psychological resilience and subjective well-being in the relationship between social alienation and self-care ability in old age among rural empty-nest older adults.

From February 17, 2021, to April 20, 2023, a questionnaire survey conducted using a multistage stratifed sampling method among 425 rural empty-nest older adults (60 years and over). These participants were recruited from a rural areas of Liaoning Province, China. The questionnaire included the Social Alienation Scale, the Psychological Resilience Scale, the Subjective Well-being Scale, the Self-care Ability In Old Age Scale. A descriptive analysis was performed to characterize the sample. Linear regression was utilized to evaluate the relationship between social alienation and self-care ability in old age. PROCESS macro (Model 6) was used to analyze the multiple mediated effects of psychological resilience and subjective well-being.

Social alienation exerted a remarkable direct effect on the self-care ability in old age among rural empty-nest older adults (β = −0.678, 95% CI = −0.750– −0.607), which represented 56.45% of the total effect. Through three significantly mediated pathways indirectly affect the self-care ability in old age: (1) through the psychological resilience pathway (β = −0.431, 95% CI = −0.515– −0.350), which represented 35.89% of the total effect; (2) through the subjective well-being pathway (β = −0. 044, 95% CI = −0.089– −0.010), which represented 3.67% of the total effect; and (3) through both the psychological resilience and subjective well-being pathway (β = −0.048, 95% CI = −0.073– −0.029), which represented 3.99% of the total effect. The total mediating effect was 43.55%.

Psychological resilience and subjective well-being mediate the relationship between social alienation and self-care ability in old age among rural empty-nest older adults. Therefore, healthcare professionals and stakeholders should be concerned about the psychological resilience status and mental health of rural empty-nest older adults, strengthen their attention to subjective well-being, and adopt necessary targeted intervention measures to enhance the psychological resilience and subjective well-being of rural empty-nest older adults.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

46 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900727/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900727