Effect of Age-Friendly Communities Action Plan on Trajectories of Older Canadians' Depressive Symptoms Between 2018 and 2020: Multilevel Results From the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Mélanie Levasseur, Daniel Naud, Verena Menec, Marie-France Dubois, Christina Wolfson, Lauren E Griffith, Lise Trottier, Jacqueline McMillan, Mélissa Généreux, Mathieu Roy, Yves Couturier, Parminder Raina
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

As the COVID-19 pandemic impacted mental health, this longitudinal study examined the effect of age-friendly communities (AFC) action plan on older adults' depressive symptoms. Using the CLSA, the CLSA COVID-19 Questionnaire study, survey of Canadian municipalities, and the census, the depressive symptoms trajectories were modeled with multilevel multinomial regressions. Most respondents (66.1%) had non-depressed trajectories, 28.1% experienced a moderate increase in depressive symptoms, and 5.8% had a depressed trajectory. AFC action plans did not have a protective effect on these trajectories. Being a female, greater loneliness, lower income, ≥2 chronic conditions, inferior social participation, weaker sense of belonging, COVID-19 infection, and pandemic stressors predicted a depressed trajectory. Neighborhood's deprivation had a weak protective effect on the declining trajectory. Although AFC action plans provided no benefits during the pandemic, volunteers facilitating resource access and social interactions could limit any increase in depressive symptoms.

爱老社区行动计划对 2018 年至 2020 年加拿大老年人抑郁症状轨迹的影响:加拿大老龄化纵向研究》的多层次结果。
由于 COVID-19 大流行影响了心理健康,本纵向研究探讨了老年友好社区行动计划对老年人抑郁症状的影响。本研究利用加拿大老年健康调查、加拿大老年健康调查 COVID-19 问卷研究、加拿大城市调查和人口普查,对抑郁症状轨迹进行了多层次多项式回归建模。大多数受访者(66.1%)的抑郁症状轨迹为非抑郁,28.1%的受访者抑郁症状中度加重,5.8%的受访者抑郁症状轨迹为抑郁。AFC 行动计划对这些轨迹没有保护作用。女性、更加孤独、收入较低、≥2 种慢性病、社会参与度较低、归属感较弱、COVID-19 感染和大流行压力等因素都预示着抑郁轨迹的出现。邻近地区的贫困对抑郁轨迹有微弱的保护作用。尽管在大流行期间,AFC 行动计划没有提供任何益处,但志愿者促进资源获取和社会交往可以限制抑郁症状的增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
192
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: INQUIRY is a peer-reviewed open access journal whose msision is to to improve health by sharing research spanning health care, including public health, health services, and health policy.
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