Dr. LAU Hi Po, BoboBoboDr. LAU Hi PoKwan, Joseph Shiu-KwongJoseph Shiu-KwongKwanCheung, Karen Siu LanKaren Siu LanCheungMartin, PeterPeterMartin2024-04-102024-04-102016The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2016, vol. 24(9), pp. 753-761.1064-74811545-7214http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/9378Open accessObjective Very old adults may be physically frail, but they do not necessarily experience poor subjective health. The authors hypothesized that the relationship between frailty and subjective health is moderated by depression for very old people. Methods In a cross-sectional study, a survey administered was by a face-to-face interview to 129 community-dwelling older adults aged 95–108. Measurements included the five-item FRAIL scale, the Geriatric Depression Scale Short-Form (GDS), and a subjective health rating. Hierarchical multiple regressions were conducted to test the moderation effects, adjusting for age, gender, living arrangement, perceived socioeconomic status, and cognition. Results The interaction effect between frailty and depression was significant. Inspection of the simple slopes revealed that those who were more depressed had a more negative frailty–subjective health relationship. There was no significant moderation effect for a withdrawal-apathy-vigor dimension of the GDS. Conclusion Our findings suggest a protective psychological mechanism may enable very old adults to maintain an optimistic view of their health despite their increasing physical and functional limitations.enCentenariansFrailtyDepressionSubjective HealthChineseDepression moderates the frailty–subjective health Link among Chinese near centenarians and centenariansPeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1016/j.jagp.2016.05.014