Study protocol of the ‘HEAL-HOA’ dual randomized controlled trial: Testing the effects of volunteering on loneliness, social, and mental health in older adults

Bibliographic Details
Title: Study protocol of the ‘HEAL-HOA’ dual randomized controlled trial: Testing the effects of volunteering on loneliness, social, and mental health in older adults
Authors: Lisa M. Warner, Da Jiang, Dannii Yuen-lan Yeung, Namkee G. Choi, Rainbow Tin Hung Ho, Jojo Yan Yan Kwok, Youqiang Song, Kee-Lee Chou
Source: Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications, Vol 38, Iss , Pp 101275- (2024)
Publisher Information: Elsevier, 2024.
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: LCC:Medicine (General)
Subject Terms: Loneliness, Older adults, Volunteering, Perceived social support, RCT, Civic engagement, Medicine (General), R5-920
More Details: Background: Interventions to reduce loneliness in older adults usually do not show sustained effects. One potential way to combat loneliness is to offer meaningful social activities. Volunteering has been suggested as one such activity – however, its effects on loneliness remain to be tested in randomized controlled trials (RCT). Methods: This planned Dual-RCT aims to recruit older adults experiencing loneliness, with subsequent randomization to either a volunteering condition (6 weeks of training before delivering one of three tele-based loneliness interventions to older intervention recipients twice a week for 6 months) or to an active control condition (psycho-education with social gatherings for six months). Power analyses require the recruitment of N = 256 older adults to detect differences between the volunteering and the active control condition (128 in each) on the primary outcome of loneliness (UCLA Loneliness Scale). Secondary outcomes comprise social network engagement, perceived social support, anxiety and depressive symptoms, self-rated health, cognitive health, perceived stress, sleep quality, and diurnal cortisol (1/3 of the sample). The main analyses will comprise condition (volunteering vs. no-volunteering) × time (baseline, 6-, 12-, 18-, 24-months follow-ups) interactions to test the effects of volunteering on loneliness and secondary outcomes. Effects are expected to be mediated via frequency, time and involvement in volunteering. Discussion: If our trial can show that volunteers delivering one of the three telephone-based interventions to lonely intervention recipients benefit from volunteer work themselves, this might encourage more older adults to volunteer, helping to solve some of the societal issues involved with rapid demographic changes.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2451-8654
Relation: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S245186542400022X; https://doaj.org/toc/2451-8654
DOI: 10.1016/j.conctc.2024.101275
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/b9244d05f0e34686a6c356a4b7432cca
Accession Number: edsdoj.b9244d05f0e34686a6c356a4b7432cca
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:24518654
DOI:10.1016/j.conctc.2024.101275
Published in:Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications
Language:English