The effect of subjective age on loneliness in the old adults: The chain mediating role of resilience and self-esteem

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Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to explore the effect of subjective age on loneliness in old adults, and the mediating role of resilience and self-esteem in subjective age and loneliness. Methods: Approximately 450 old adults from Jiangxi, Hunan, Henan provinces completed the third edition of the Loneliness Scale (UCLA-LS III), Age Decade Scale (ADS), Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC), and Self-Esteem Scale (SES). Results: (1) Subjective age was significantly positively correlated with loneliness. (2) Resilience, self-esteem, and loneliness were significantly negatively correlated. (3) Subjective age affected loneliness through the mediating effects of resilience and self-esteem, respectively. (4) Resilience and self-esteem played a chain mediating role between subjective age and loneliness. Conclusion: Resilience and self-esteem can directly affect the loneliness of the old adults alone and can also affect the loneliness of the old adults through the chain mediating effect of resilience and self-esteem.

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APA

Xie, J., Zhang, B., Yao, Z., Zhang, W., Wang, J., Zhao, C. N., & Huang, X. (2022). The effect of subjective age on loneliness in the old adults: The chain mediating role of resilience and self-esteem. Frontiers in Public Health, 10. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.907934

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