タナカ マサヒロ   TANAKA, Masahiro
  田中 将裕
健康科学部 リハビリテーション学科
講師
発表年月日 2026/02
発表テーマ The impact of activity and participation on social isolation in older adults two years later: findings from longitudinal data in 2021 and 2023.
発表学会名 the 19th World Federation of Occupational Therapists Congress 2026
学会区分 国際学会
発表形式 ポスター
単独共同区分 共同
国名 タイ
開催地名 バンコク
開催期間 2026/02/09~2026/02/12
発表者・共同発表者 ◎Miki Tanikaga, Jun-ichi Uemura, Masahiro Tanaka, Junpei Mizuno
概要 Introduction: Social isolation is a significant risk factor for dementia in later life, emphasizing the importance of preventive interventions.
Objectives: This study investigated whether activity engagement in 2021 impacted the social isolation of community-dwelling older adults in 2023.
Methods: Questionnaires were distributed to all 1606 households in a suburban district in October 2021 and 2023, with 749 and 687 responses, respectively. Participants under 65 years old, those socially isolated in 2021, individuals with hospitalization history within the past year, long-term care insurance users, and cases with missing data were excluded. Social isolation was defined as a score below 12 on the Lubben Social Network Scale. Activity engagement rates were measured using the Activity Card Sort-Japan version across four domains: instrumental daily activities, low-intensity leisure, high-intensity leisure, and sociocultural activities. Covariates included age, sex, cohabitation status, physical function, subjective cognitive function, depression, and health-related quality of life in 2021. Binary logistic regression identified factors associated with social isolation in 2023, with significance set at p < 0.05. The study was approved by the institutional ethics committee, and consent was considered obtained upon questionnaire return.
Results: 356 responses were successfully linked (follow-up rate: 47.5%), and 218 participants were included in the analysis (median age: 78.3 years; 55.5% female). 26 individuals (11.9%) became socially isolated by 2023. Risk factors included being female (OR=0.319, p=0.011) and engagement rates in sociocultural activities in 2021 (OR=0.059, p=0.032). In other words, low engagement in sociocultural activities indicated increased social isolation two years later, especially among older men.
Conclusion: The results underscore the importance of promoting social participation, particularly among older men, to prevent social isolation.