4.3 Article

How Loneliness Worked on Suicidal Ideation among Chinese Nursing Home Residents: Roles of Depressive Symptoms and Resilience

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105472

Keywords

suicidal ideation; resilience; loneliness; depressive symptoms; nursing home residents

Funding

  1. high-quality courses construction for graduate education in Shandong Province [SDYKC18007]
  2. new liberal arts project of Shandong University [2020XWKC001]

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The study revealed that loneliness and depressive symptoms are risk factors for suicidal ideation among nursing home residents, while resilience plays a mediating and moderating role in attenuating the adverse effects. Positive psychological interventions to enhance resilience might be effective in preventing suicide in this population.
Suicide in later life is becoming severe under rapid population aging, especially for nursing home residents. Loneliness, an increasingly represented issue among nursing home residents, is found to be a risk factor for depressive symptoms. Both loneliness and depressive symptoms may contribute to the development of suicidal ideation. According to the Protective Factor Model, resilience can act as a moderating role interacting with risk factors to buffer the negative effects on the outcome. The present study aimed to assess the mediating role of depressive symptoms and the moderating effect of resilience on the risk factors of suicidal ideation to attenuate the adverse contribution among nursing home residents. A total of 538 nursing home residents participated in this cross-sectional study, and their suicidal ideation, resilience, loneliness, and depressive symptoms were measured. The mediating effect and moderated mediation model were tested using the Macro Process of SPSS 21.0. Statistics showed that 19.7% of participants had suicidal ideation. The mediating model (H1: B = 0.477, p < 0.001; H2: B = 0.325, p < 0.001; H3: B = 0.308, p < 0.001) and the moderating effect of resilience interacting loneliness (H4: B = -0.133, p < 0.001; H6: B = -0.109, p < 0.001) and depressive symptoms (H5: B = -0.077, p < 0.001) were statistically significant. The findings indicated the protective effect of resilience in alleviating the negative influence of risk factors for suicidal ideation, suggesting that positive psychological interventions for resilience building might be effective in suicide prevention among nursing home residents.

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