The impact of social participation on activities of daily living in older adults with knee osteoarthritis: the chain mediating effects of sleep quality and multidimensional frailty
Huiqiong Tu, Tingting Zhao, Lan Chen, Yanyan Ling, Yelin Zhang, Jianling Wei, Xiaomeng Liang, Li Zhou, Yushi Liu

TL;DR
This study shows that social participation helps older adults with knee osteoarthritis maintain daily living abilities, partly by improving sleep and reducing frailty.
Contribution
The novel contribution is identifying a chain mediation pathway involving sleep quality and frailty linking social participation to daily living outcomes in knee osteoarthritis patients.
Findings
Social participation significantly correlates with sleep quality, frailty, and daily living abilities.
Sleep quality and frailty each partially mediate the relationship between social participation and daily living.
The combined indirect effect of sleep quality and frailty accounts for 42.51% of the total effect on daily living.
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the associations among social participation, sleep quality, multidimensional frailty, and activities of daily living (ADL) in older adults with knee osteoarthritis (KOA), and to further evaluate whether sleep quality and frailty jointly mediate these relationships. A cross-sectional study was conducted among 288 older adults with KOA recruited via convenience sampling. Validated scales were used to assess social participation, sleep quality, multidimensional frailty, and ADL. Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS 26.0 and the PROCESS 4.1 macro, including descriptive statistics, correlation analyses, and mediation modeling. Social participation was significantly associated with sleep quality, multidimensional frailty, and ADL (all p < 0.001). Sleep quality was significantly associated with frailty and ADL, and frailty was also associated with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFrailty in Older Adults · Chronic Disease Management Strategies · Occupational Therapy Practice and Research
