- Volunteering in the CCT programme produced significant improvements in psychological well-being among adults aged 55-79 compared with controls over eight months.
- Meaning in life mediated the prosocialness to psychological well-being relationship, operating through a chained pathway via self-efficacy.
- Volunteering effects were strongest for participants with lower resilience or higher loneliness, supporting expansion of CCT-like programmes to strengthen community resilience and eldercare.
J Aging Soc Policy. 2026 Jun 8:1-16. doi: 10.1080/08959420.2026.2680901. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Rapid population aging in Hong Kong heightens risks of social isolation and purposelessness among older adults. The Community Care Team (CCT) program, launched by the government in 2023, recruits and trains volunteers for grassroots care activities with the aim of strengthening community resilience, i.e. the collective capacity to mobilize resources, sustain social support, and respond to challenges such as emergencies or social crises. This three-wave longitudinal study examined the effects of volunteering in the CCT program on psychological well-being in adults aged 55-79 (67 volunteers, 108 controls). Assessments at baseline, 3 months, and 8 months measured psychological well-being, prosocialness, self-efficacy, meaning in life, resilience, and loneliness. Volunteers demonstrated significant improvements compared to controls. Meaning in life mediated the prosocialness- psychological-well-being relationship, with a chained pathway via self- efficacy. Moderation showed stronger benefits for those with lower resilience or higher loneliness. Findings support expanding CCT-like programs to enhance mental health and sustainable eldercare.
PMID:42258380 | DOI:10.1080/08959420.2026.2680901
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