Xiaoxia Qiao’s research while affiliated with Peking University and other places

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Publications (35)


Sleep quality, depression and frailty among Chinese community-dwelling older adults
  • Article

May 2021

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59 Reads

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52 Citations

Geriatric Nursing

Xinyi Liu

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Cuili Wang

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Xiaoxia Qiao

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[...]

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Yaru Jin

We aimed to explore the relationship between sleep quality and frailty, and depression as a mediator and its interaction with sleep quality on frailty. This was a cross-sectional study among 936 Chinese community-dwelling adults aged≥60 years. Sleep quality, frailty and depression were measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Frailty Phenotype and the 5-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-5), respectively. We found that depression mediated the association between poor sleep quality and physical frailty, attenuating the association between poor sleep and physical frailty by 51.9%. Older adults with both poor sleep quality and depression had higher risk of frailty than those with poor sleep quality or depression alone. These results implicate multidisciplinary care for frail older adults with poor sleep quality.


Age-Related Positivity Effect" in the Relationship Between Pain and Depression Among Chinese Community-Dwelling Older Adults: Sex Differences

April 2021

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11 Reads

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3 Citations

Pain Management Nursing

Purpose To examine the “age-related positivity effect” and its sex differences in the pain-depression relationship among Chinese community-dwelling older adults. Design Cross-sectional design. Methods The study was conducted with a sample of 1,913 older adults in Jinan, China. Data were collected on pain intensity, age, sex, depressive symptoms, and potential covariates. Results The hierarchical linear regression analyses revealed that pain intensity was significantly related to depressive symptoms, there was a significant two-way interaction between age and pain intensity, and there was a significant three-way interaction between sex, age, and pain intensity. The Johnson-Neyman plot revealed that the relationship between pain and depressive symptoms decreased with advancing age, indicating an “age-related positivity effect.” And the age-related positivity effect in the pain-depression relationship was significant only in men, but not in women. Conclusions The study suggests that all older women and “young-old” men (younger senior citizens aged 60-79) in China are more likely to experience depressive symptoms from pain. Interventions on cognitive psychology should particularly target all older women and young-old men to reduce the detrimental effect of pain on emotional well-being.


Development and validation of an instrument to measure beliefs in physical activity among (pre)frail older adults: An integration of the Health Belief Model and the Theory of Planned Behavior

March 2021

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52 Reads

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17 Citations

Patient Education and Counseling

Objective To develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of an instrument assessing beliefs in physical activity based on the integration of the Health Belief Model (HBM) and the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) among (pre)frail older adults. Methods A literature review and semi-structured interviews were conducted to generate the initial item pool of the instrument. A rural sample of 611 (pre)frail older adults was enrolled to examine the validity and reliability of the instrument. Results The exploratory factor analysis extracted eight factors for this instrument, explaining 71.3% of the variance in beliefs in physical activity. The confirmatory factor analysis confirmed the eight-factor structure. Linear regression models found that the integrated HBM-TPB constructs explained 65.9% of the variance in physical activity intention and 13.6% in physical activity. The Cronbach’s alpha coefficients for the factors ranged from 0.80 to 0.98, and ICCs ranged from 0.71 to 0.85. Conclusion This instrument has satisfactory construct validity, predictive validity, internal consistency reliability and test-retest reliability, and it can be used in (pre)frail older adults to measure beliefs in physical activity. Practice implications This instrument may help health care providers understand beliefs in physical activity and facilitate targeted interventions among (pre)frail older adults.


Predictive Performance of 7 Frailty Instruments for Short-term Disability, Falls and Hospitalization among Chinese Community-dwelling Older Adults: A Prospective Cohort Study

February 2021

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24 Reads

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39 Citations

International Journal of Nursing Studies

Background Frailty becomes a great challenge with population aging. The proactive identification of frailty is considered as a rational solution in the community. Previous studies found that frailty instruments had insufficient predictive accuracy for adverse outcomes, but they mainly focused on long-term outcomes and constructed frailty instruments based on available data not original forms. The predictive performance of original frailty instruments for short-term outcomes in community-dwelling older adults remains unknown. Objective To examine the predictive performance of seven frailty instruments in their original forms for 1-year incident outcomes among community-dwelling older adults. Design A prospective cohort study. Settings A total of 22 communities were selected by a stratified sampling method from one Chinese city. Participants A total of 749 older adults aged ≥ 60 years (mean age of 69.2 years, 69.8% female) were followed up after 1 year. Methods Baseline frailty was assessed by three purely physical dimensional instruments (i.e. Frailty Phenotype, the Study of Osteoporotic Fracture and FRAIL Scale) and four multidimensional instruments (i.e. Frailty Index, Groningen Frailty Indicator, Tilburg Frailty Indicator and Comprehensive Frailty Assessment Instrument), respectively. Outcomes included incident disability, falls, hospitalization and the combined outcome at 1-year follow-up. The receiver operating characteristic curves were plotted to assess the predictive performance of frailty instruments. Results The areas under the curves of seven frailty instruments in predicting incident outcomes ranged from 0.55 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.51-0.60] to 0.67 (95% CI: 0.61-0.72), with high specificity (72.3%-99.2%) and low sensitivity (4.0%-49.6%). Four multidimensional instruments had much higher sensitivity (20.9%-49.6% versus 4.0%-11.7%) than three purely physical dimensional instruments. Overall, the Frailty Index was more accurate than some instruments in predicting incident outcomes, while several self-report instruments had comparable predictive accuracy to the Frailty Index for all (FRAIL Scale) or some (Groningen Frailty Indicator and Tilburg Frailty Indicator) of the incident outcomes. Conclusions All frailty instruments have inadequate predictive accuracy for short-term outcomes among community-dwelling older adults. The Frailty Index roughly performs better but self-report instruments are comparable to the Frailty Index for all or some of the outcomes. An accurate frailty instrument needs to be developed, and the simple self-report instruments could be used temporarily as practical and efficient tools in primary care.


Functional disability mediates the relationship between pain and depression among community-dwelling older adults: Age and sex as moderators

January 2021

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24 Reads

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14 Citations

Geriatric Nursing

Objective To examine the moderating effects of age and sex in the role of functional disability as a mediator between pain and depression. Methods Participants were 1917 community-dwelling older adults from Jinan, China. Data were collected on pain intensity, functional disability in activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living, depressive symptoms and covariates. Results Functional disability partially mediated the relationship between pain intensity and depressive symptoms (estimate = 0.015, SE = 0.007, 95% CI [0.004, 0.030]). Age and sex moderated both the direct and indirect effect of the mediation model. The mediating effect of functional disability was significant in the old-old men, young-old men, and young-old women, but not in the old-old women. Conclusions Interventions should target both pain and pain-related functional disability to improve their emotional well-being among community-dwelling older adults. Importantly, strategies should be tailored across different age and sex groups to improve their effectiveness.


Comparison of 6 frailty screening tools in diagnostic properties among Chinese community-dwelling older people

September 2020

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28 Reads

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20 Citations

Geriatric Nursing

We aimed to compare the diagnostic test accuracy (DTA) of six frailty screening tools against comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) in the community. A total of 1177 community-dwelling older people were recruited. Frailty was assessed by purely physical tools including Physical Frailty Phenotype (PFP), FRAIL (fatigue, resistance, ambulation, illness and loss of weight), Study of Osteoporotic Fracture (SOF), and multidimensional tools including Tilburg Frailty Indicator (TFI), Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) and Comprehensive Frailty Assessment Instrument (CFAI). The receiver operating characteristic curve analyses were performed. The GFI, TFI and CFAI [areas under the curve (AUCs): 0.78-0.80] had better diagnostic accuracy than SOF, PFP and FRAIL (AUCs: 0.69-0.72) (χ2: 6.37-26.76, P<.05). The optimal cut-offs for the PFP, FRAIL and SOF were identical to their original prefrail cut-offs. These results implicate that the multidimensional tools are more effective to identify frailty in the whole community setting, while the self-report FRAIL may be used to identify the prefrail and facilitate early interventions particularly in the community setting with adequate healthcare resources.


Relationship Between Frailty and Depression Among Community-Dwelling Older Adults: The Mediating and Moderating Role of Social Support

June 2020

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74 Reads

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47 Citations

The Gerontologist

Background and objectives: Frailty is associated with depression in older adults, and reduces their social support. However, the mechanism underlying such relationship remains unclear. We aim to examine whether social support acts as a mediator or moderator in the relationship between frailty and depression. Research design and methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted among 1779 community-dwelling older adults aged 60 and over. Frailty, social support and depressive symptoms were measured by the Physical Frailty Phenotype (PFP), Social Support Rating Scale (SSRS), and 5-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-5), respectively. Data were also collected on age, gender, years of schooling, monthly income, cognitive function, number of chronic diseases, physical function, and pain. Results: Linear regression models showed that subjective support and support utilization, but not objective support, mediated and moderated the relationship between frailty and depressive symptoms. The Johnson-Neyman technique determined a threshold of 30 for subjective support, but not for support utilization, beyond which the detrimental effect of frailty on depressive symptoms was offset. Discussion and implications: Social support underlies the association of frailty with depression, and its protective role varies by type. Interventions on depression should address improving perceptions and utilization of social support among frail older adults rather than simply providing them with objective support.


The association between frailty and medication adherence among community-dwelling older adults with chronic diseases: Medication beliefs acting as mediators

May 2020

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27 Reads

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23 Citations

Patient Education and Counseling

Objective To explore the association between frailty and medication adherence by modeling medication beliefs (i.e., necessity and concerns) as mediators among community-dwelling older patients. Methods This cross-sectional study was conducted among 780 Chinese older patients. Frailty, medication adherence and medication beliefs were assessed using the Comprehensive Frailty Assessment Instrument (CFAI), the 4-item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS-4) and the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire-Specific (BMQ-Specific), respectively. The PROCESS SPSS Macro version 2.16.3, model 4 was used to test the significance of the indirect effects. Results Frailty was associated with high medication necessity (β = 0.091, p = 0.011) and high medication concerns (β = 0.297, p < 0.001). Medication adherence was positively associated with medication necessity (β = 0.129, p = 0.001), and negatively associated with medication concerns (β = -0.203, p < 0.001). Medication necessity and medication concerns attenuated the total effect of frailty on medication adherence by -13.6% and 70.3%, respectively Conclusion High medication concerns among frail older patients inhibit their medication adherence, which cannot be offset by the positive effect of their high medication necessity on medication adherence. Practice implications Interventions should target medication beliefs among frail older patients, particularly medication concerns, to efficiently improve their medication adherence.


Age differences in the relationship between frailty and depression among community-dwelling older adults

February 2020

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26 Reads

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27 Citations

Geriatric Nursing

Objective: This study aims to examine age differences in the relationship between frailty and depression among older adults METHODS: A total of 1789 community-dwelling older adults were recruited from eastern China. Physical frailty and depressive symptoms were assessed using the Frailty Phenotype and the 5-item Geriatric Depression Scale, respectively. Results: The hierarchical multiple linear regression analysis revealed that frailty was significantly related to depressive symptoms (β = 0.272, P < 0.001) and there was a significant interaction between age and frailty (β = -0.703, P < 0.001). The Johnson-Neyman plot revealed that the relationship between frailty and depressive symptoms became weaker as people aged. Conclusions: Frailty is more likely to cause depressive symptoms among the young-old than among the old-old, reflecting the age-related positivity effect. This highlights that interventions on emotional regulation should particularly target the young-old to reduce the effect of frailty on depression.


Cross-cultural adaptation and psychometric properties of the Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) among Chinese community-dwelling older adults

October 2019

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27 Reads

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24 Citations

Geriatric Nursing

The objective was to examine the feasibility, reliability and validity of the Groningen Frailty Indicator (GFI) among Chinese community-dwelling older adults. Of the 1230 participants, 1202 (97.7%) completed all items on the GFI. The internal consistency was acceptable (Cronbach's α = 0.64), and the test-retest reliability within a 7-15-day interval was good (ICC = 0.87). The GFI showed good diagnostic accuracy in the identification of frailty with reference to the frailty index (AUC = 0.84), and the optimal frailty cut-point was 3. Convergent validity was supported by significant correlations between each domain of the GFI and the corresponding alternative measurement(s). Higher proportions of frailty (GFI ≥ 3) were found in those who were older, female, less-educated, lived alone, and had 2 or more chronic diseases than in their counterparts, supporting its known-group discriminant validity. The Chinese GFI has good feasibility, acceptable reliability and satisfactory validity among community-dwelling older adults.


Citations (28)


... SM) was positive and was found significant (p = 0.03, β = 0.15), thus verifying the first hypothesis (H1). The effect size (f2 = 0.264) was moderate according to the designation of Zhou et al. (2024). The moderation roles of IoT and WT in the connection between TSP and SM also turned out to be substantial. ...

Reference:

The moderating effect of internet of things and wearable technologies on enhancing safety management in construction sites
Impacts of Subjective Cognitive Decline and Mild Cognitive Impairment on the Effectiveness of An Exercise Intervention among Community-dwelling (Pre)frail Older Adults
  • Citing Article
  • August 2024

Journal of Psychiatric Research

... US and European HIV care guidelines suggest assessment for frailty using a validated metric among PWH starting at age 50 years, although differing assessments are often used. 52 Despite increased characterization of frailty in PWH, knowledge gaps persist. While geriatric-HIV programs have begun to emerge to meet the unique clinical needs of older PWH, including frailty assessments, such clinics are limited, and many HIV clinicians do not assess frailty in routine care. ...

Clinical practice guidelines for frailty vary in quality but guide primary health care: a systematic review
  • Citing Article
  • July 2023

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology

... The feature variables and candidate models used are the same as those employed in the BA predictor building. The choice of models was also based on publications and their inherent interpretability and high predictive accuracy 33,34 . ...

Development and validation of a preliminary clinical support system for measuring the probability of incident 2-year (pre)frailty among community-dwelling older adults: A prospective cohort study
  • Citing Article
  • June 2023

International Journal of Medical Informatics

... environmental factors influencing IC of reasonably robust individuals prior to significant losses may facilitate the identification of interventions early in the life course. Instead of exploring a comparatively single source of socioenvironmental support like earlier research (most support was from family and friends, or society) 20,21 , chronic disease resource utilization is based on a social-ecological model of resources, viewing the environment as a multi-level overall structure. This concept seems to fit in better with the way that the environment is interpreted in the WHO's framework for healthy ageing. ...

How does social support interact with intrinsic capacity to affect the trajectory of functional ability among older adults? Findings of a population-based longitudinal study
  • Citing Article
  • March 2023

Maturitas

... Loneliness was evaluated based on individuals' subjective perception of feeling alone in the past 3 months. Depression was assessed using the Geriatric Depression Scales-5, with a score of 2 or less indicating a normal range [31]. Cognitive function was assessed using the Chinese version of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) [32], which provides insights into cognitive abilities and impairments. ...

Validation and Comparison of Three Short Depression Screening Tools Among Chinese Community-Dwelling Older Adults
  • Citing Article
  • October 2022

Research in Gerontological Nursing

... However, there's been a lack of attention to intervention effects on senior fitness, sleep quality, and mental health (Yoon et al., 2018;Kwan et al., 2020). Researchers are encouraged to explore the effectiveness of exercise interventions from a broad perspective for comprehensive effectiveness evaluation, considering exercise interventions have been proven to offer a wide range of health benefits (Qiao et al., 2022). ...

A theory‐driven exercise intervention among community‐dwelling (pre)frail older adults: Protocol for a stepped‐wedge cluster‐randomized trial
  • Citing Article
  • Publisher preview available
  • May 2022

Journal of Advanced Nursing

... Their results identified four classes sharing similar longitudinal IC trajectories: "high-stable" (20.13%), "normal-stable" (40.58%), "sensory dysfunction" (29.53%), and "all dysfunction" (9.76%). However, three IC patterns ("sharp declines in sensory domain", "sharp declines in locomotion, psychological, cognition, and vitality domains", and "relatively healthy") were identified in Yu et al.'s study [31]. Regarding the size of the trajectory groups in our study, the stable high IC group was the largest (71.8%), which was followed by the mediumlevel increasing IC, medium-level decreasing IC, and low-level IC. ...

Patterns of intrinsic capacity among community-dwelling older adults: Identification by latent class analysis and association with one-year adverse outcomes
  • Citing Article
  • May 2022

Geriatric Nursing

... Study populations were drawn from a wide range of clinical environments. Eight studies assessed the prevalence of frailty across all inpatient wards [31,37,38,41,43,45,54,55]. The remaining studies focussed on one or more specific environments, with internal medical wards being the most commonly surveyed (n = 13) [28,30,32,33,36,39,42,44,47,48,50,51,53], followed by geriatrics (n = 8) Systematic review and meta-analysis of the prevalence of frailty and pre-frailty [29,30,34,35,46,49,52,56], cardiology (n = 2) [30,42], general surgery (n = 4) [33,42,44,50] and intensive care (n = 1) [40]. ...

Executive function and attentional bias as serial mediators in the relationship between frailty and depressive symptoms among older inpatients: A cross‐sectional study
  • Citing Article
  • April 2022

Journal of Clinical Nursing

... The psychological burden of frailty, combined with reduced social interactions and support, exacerbates the challenges faced by these patients. Psychological support can alleviate the symptoms of FS and should therefore be strongly recommended in this group of patients [42]. It is worth emphasizing here that good control of blood pressure and lipid profile can reduce the risk of dementia, which can significantly worsen social aspects of QoL [43]. ...

Effects of social support on frailty trajectory classes among community-dwelling older adults: The mediating role of depressive symptoms and physical activity
  • Citing Article
  • May 2022

Geriatric Nursing

... Our study indicated that self-efficacy can positively affect self-management among elderly stroke survivors. This result is consistent with previous research results [12,38,39]. The reasons for this may be that elderly stroke survivors with higher self-efficacy have intrinsic motivation, thus having more confidence to engage in self-management behaviors [12]. ...

Association between self‐efficacy and self‐management behaviours among individuals at high risk for stroke: Social support acting as a mediator

Journal of Clinical Nursing