The social convoy for depression among the older adults in rural China: A multilevel structural equation modeling analysis using a national sample.

Autor: Liao, Yujing, Duan, Wenjie, Cheng, Xinfeng
Zdroj: Geriatric Nursing; Nov2024, Vol. 60, p570-579, 10p
Abstrakt: • According to the social convoy theory, functional limitations in rural older adults are linked to depressive symptoms, with social activity participation and parent-child interaction serving as key mediators at the between- and within-person levels. • Social convoy factors (social activity participation and parent-child interaction) partially mediated the associations between functional limitations and depressive symptoms at the between-person level. • Older adults with more functional limitations participated less in social activities but engaged more in parent-child interaction, impacting their depressive symptoms differently. • Interventions to reduce depressive symptoms should be tailored based on the older adults' functional limitations, prioritizing social activities for those with greater limitations, intergenerational programs for those with fewer limitations, and a combination of both for those facing significant increases in limitations. Rural older adults experience significant mental and physical health challenges. Social convoy theory offers insights into this by assuming functional limitations as antecedent factors of depression through multiple social-related levels. The combined panel data from 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2018 of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (1,354 individuals with 5,416 responses) was utilized to address the above assumption. The multilevel structural equation modeling was employed to examine whether social activity participation and parent-child interaction mediate the relationship between functional limitations and depressive symptoms at multiple levels. The results indicated that the mediation effects existed only at the between-person level. Specifically, older adults with more functional limitations participated in less social activity, leading to more depressive symptoms, but engaged in more parent-child interaction, reducing depressive symptoms. At the within-person level, depressive symptoms in a given older adult were correlated with functional limitations. In years with greater limitations, older adults participated less in both social activity and parent-child interaction. Interventions should be tailored to older adults' functional limitations, focusing on social activities for those with typically greater limitations, intergenerational programs for those with fewer limitations, and a combination of both for those experiencing significant increases in limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Supplemental Index