Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity

Abstract Background Depression, anxiety and loneliness are common among older patients. As a potential psychological buffer against these challenges, meaning in life (MIL) remains underexplored in longitudinal studies within this population. This study aims to examine the longitudinal relationship o...

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Main Authors: King Wa Tam, Dexing Zhang, Yiqi Li, Zijun Xu, Qiao Li, Yang Zhao, Lu Niu, Samuel YS Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-03-01
Series:BMC Geriatrics
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-025-05762-7
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author King Wa Tam
Dexing Zhang
Yiqi Li
Zijun Xu
Qiao Li
Yang Zhao
Lu Niu
Samuel YS Wong
author_facet King Wa Tam
Dexing Zhang
Yiqi Li
Zijun Xu
Qiao Li
Yang Zhao
Lu Niu
Samuel YS Wong
author_sort King Wa Tam
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Depression, anxiety and loneliness are common among older patients. As a potential psychological buffer against these challenges, meaning in life (MIL) remains underexplored in longitudinal studies within this population. This study aims to examine the longitudinal relationship of MIL with depression, anxiety, and loneliness among older adults with multimorbidity in Hong Kong. Methods In a prospective cohort of 1077 primary care patients aged 60 or above with multimorbidity in Hong Kong, MIL was assessed using an item from the Chinese Purpose in Life test at baseline, the 1st follow-up (median: 1.3 years), and the 2nd follow-up (median: 3.1 years). Depression, anxiety, and loneliness were assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and De Jong Gierveld Loneliness scales, respectively, at each time point. Cross-lagged relationships between MIL and these measures were examined using cross-lagged panel models. Results Participants had an average age of 70.0 years, with 70.1% being female. Higher MIL predicted lower depression (β = -0.15), anxiety (β = -0.13), overall loneliness (β = -0.18), emotional loneliness (β = -0.15), and social loneliness (β = -0.16) at the 1st follow-up. Additionally, higher MIL predicted lower overall loneliness (β = -0.12), emotional loneliness (β = -0.11), and social loneliness (β = -0.10) at the 2nd follow-up. At baseline, higher depression (β = -0.21), overall loneliness (β = -0.15), emotional loneliness (β = -0.11), and social loneliness (β = -0.11), but not anxiety, predicted lower MIL at the 1st follow-up. At the 1st follow-up, depression (β = -0.23), anxiety (β = -0.16), overall loneliness (β = -0.10), and emotional loneliness (β = -0.11), but not social loneliness, predicted lower MIL at the 2nd follow-up. Conclusions The findings suggest a bidirectional relationship between MIL and mental health outcomes in older patients with multimorbidity in Hong Kong. Emotional loneliness demonstrated a more consistent bidirectional association with MIL than social loneliness. Further research is needed to understand the underlying mechanisms and develop targeted interventions addressing both MIL and mental health problems.
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spelling doaj-art-21fce5edf6e14d098b42aedfb9913ce02025-08-20T02:49:12ZengBMCBMC Geriatrics1471-23182025-03-0125111310.1186/s12877-025-05762-7Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidityKing Wa Tam0Dexing Zhang1Yiqi Li2Zijun Xu3Qiao Li4Yang Zhao5Lu Niu6Samuel YS Wong7JC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales HospitalJC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales HospitalJC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales HospitalJC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales HospitalJC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales HospitalThe George Institute for Global Health, University of New South WalesXiangya School of Public Health, Central South UniversityJC School of Public Health and Primary Care, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Prince of Wales HospitalAbstract Background Depression, anxiety and loneliness are common among older patients. As a potential psychological buffer against these challenges, meaning in life (MIL) remains underexplored in longitudinal studies within this population. This study aims to examine the longitudinal relationship of MIL with depression, anxiety, and loneliness among older adults with multimorbidity in Hong Kong. Methods In a prospective cohort of 1077 primary care patients aged 60 or above with multimorbidity in Hong Kong, MIL was assessed using an item from the Chinese Purpose in Life test at baseline, the 1st follow-up (median: 1.3 years), and the 2nd follow-up (median: 3.1 years). Depression, anxiety, and loneliness were assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, and De Jong Gierveld Loneliness scales, respectively, at each time point. Cross-lagged relationships between MIL and these measures were examined using cross-lagged panel models. Results Participants had an average age of 70.0 years, with 70.1% being female. Higher MIL predicted lower depression (β = -0.15), anxiety (β = -0.13), overall loneliness (β = -0.18), emotional loneliness (β = -0.15), and social loneliness (β = -0.16) at the 1st follow-up. Additionally, higher MIL predicted lower overall loneliness (β = -0.12), emotional loneliness (β = -0.11), and social loneliness (β = -0.10) at the 2nd follow-up. At baseline, higher depression (β = -0.21), overall loneliness (β = -0.15), emotional loneliness (β = -0.11), and social loneliness (β = -0.11), but not anxiety, predicted lower MIL at the 1st follow-up. At the 1st follow-up, depression (β = -0.23), anxiety (β = -0.16), overall loneliness (β = -0.10), and emotional loneliness (β = -0.11), but not social loneliness, predicted lower MIL at the 2nd follow-up. Conclusions The findings suggest a bidirectional relationship between MIL and mental health outcomes in older patients with multimorbidity in Hong Kong. Emotional loneliness demonstrated a more consistent bidirectional association with MIL than social loneliness. Further research is needed to understand the underlying mechanisms and develop targeted interventions addressing both MIL and mental health problems.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-025-05762-7Meaning in lifeDepressionAnxietyLonelinessCohortPrimary care
spellingShingle King Wa Tam
Dexing Zhang
Yiqi Li
Zijun Xu
Qiao Li
Yang Zhao
Lu Niu
Samuel YS Wong
Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
BMC Geriatrics
Meaning in life
Depression
Anxiety
Loneliness
Cohort
Primary care
title Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
title_full Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
title_fullStr Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
title_full_unstemmed Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
title_short Meaning in life: bidirectional relationship with depression, anxiety, and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
title_sort meaning in life bidirectional relationship with depression anxiety and loneliness in a longitudinal cohort of older primary care patients with multimorbidity
topic Meaning in life
Depression
Anxiety
Loneliness
Cohort
Primary care
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-025-05762-7
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