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Journal Article

Citation

Conwell Y, Van Orden KA, Stone DM, McIntosh WLKW, Messing S, Rowe J, Podgorski C, Kaukeinen KA, Tu X. Am. J. Geriatr. Psychiatry 2021; 29(8): 748-757.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jagp.2020.05.021

PMID

32586693

PMCID

PMC7266585

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether peer companionship delivered by an aging services agency to socially-disconnected older adult primary care patients was associated with improvement in suicidal ideation depression, anxiety, and psychological connectedness.
DESIGN: Pragmatic, nonblinded, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial comparing peer companionship, The Senior Connection (TSC), to care-as-usual (CAU).
SETTING: Lifespan, a nonmedical, community-based aging services agency.
PARTICIPANTS: Adult primary care patients ages 60 years or older who endorsed feelings of loneliness or being a burden on others.
INTERVENTION: TSC was delivered by Lifespan volunteers who provided supportive visits and phone calls in the subjects' homes. CAU involved no peer companion assignment.
MEASUREMENTS: The primary outcome was suicidal ideation assessed by the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale; secondary outcomes were depression, anxiety, and feelings of belonging and being a burden on others. Data were collected at baseline, 3-, 6-, and 12-months.
RESULTS: Subjects (55% female) had a mean age of 71 years. There was no difference between groups in change in suicidal ideation or belonging. Subjects randomized to TSC had greater reduction in depression (PHQ-9; 2.33 point reduction for TSC versus 1.32 for CAU, p = 0.05), anxiety (GAD-7; TSC 1.52 versus CAU 0.28, p = 0.03), and perceived burden on others (INQ; 0.46 TSC versus 0.09 CAU, p <0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: TSC was superior to CAU for improving depression, anxiety, and perceived burden, but not suicidal ideation. Although effect sizes were small, the low-cost and nationwide availability of peer companionship justify further examination of its effectiveness and scalability in improving mental health outcomes of socially disconnected older adults.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Aged; Female; Male; Anxiety; Depression; Suicidal Ideation; Mental Health; suicidal ideation; depression; Loneliness; Primary Health Care; loneliness; social connectedness; peer companionship

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