Depression, Loneliness and Quality of Life in Institutionalised and Non-Institutionalised Older Adults in Portugal: A Cross-Sectional Study.

IF 2.4 Q1 NURSING
Celso Silva, Rogério Ferreira, Bruno Morgado, Elisabete Alves, César Fonseca
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Our study aims to estimate the prevalence of depressive symptomatology among older adults and to assess their association with loneliness and quality of life according to institutionalisation status in a Portuguese sample.

Background: The World Health Organisation estimates that by 2050, the world's population over 60 will number two billion people, which poses complex challenges in terms of maintaining the mental health of older adults. The COVID-19 pandemic has increased the prevalence of depressive symptoms in this population, but the post-pandemic phase has not yet been studied much.

Methods: A cross-sectional survey was carried out in 2023 among institutionalised and non-institutionalised older adults (total n = 525; institutionalised = 458; non-institutionalised = 67) who were selected by convenience sampling. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) was used to assess the presence of depressive symptoms, the WHOQOL-BREF to assess perceived quality of life and the Loneliness Scale (UCLA) to assess negative feelings of loneliness. Unconditional logistic regression models were fitted to compute crude adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and the respective 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs) for the association between sociodemographic, clinical and psychosocial characteristics and depressive symptomatology, according to institutionalisation status. The final model was adjusted for sex, age, QoL and feelings of loneliness.

Results: Of the 525 participants, 74.6% of the non-institutionalised participants had no or minimal depressive symptoms, while 55.4% of the institutionalised participants fell into this category. Mild to moderately severe depressive symptoms were present in 25.4% of the non-institutionalised participants. 26.9% of the institutionalised participants had mild symptoms, 11.8% had moderate symptoms, 3.9% had moderately severe symptoms, and 2.0% had severe depressive symptoms. Overall, a higher quality of life was associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms. Participants describing feelings of loneliness were more likely also to present depressive symptoms (OR = 78.10; 95%CI 2.90-2106.08 and OR = 3.53; 95%CI 1.72-6.91 for non-institutionalised and institutionalised older adults, respectively), independently of institutionalisation status.

Conclusions: The prevalence of depressive symptoms is high in older adults, which means that it has not decreased after the increase seen due to the COVID-19 pandemic. A lower perception of quality of life and the presence of negative feelings of loneliness are associated with the presence of depressive symptoms. These conclusions suggest that plans should be developed to intervene in the dimensions of depressive symptoms, perceived quality of life and negative feelings of loneliness.

葡萄牙机构养老和非机构养老老年人的抑郁、孤独感和生活质量:一项横断面研究
我们的研究旨在估算抑郁症状在老年人中的流行程度,并根据葡萄牙样本的机构化状况评估其与孤独感和生活质量的关系:背景:据世界卫生组织估计,到 2050 年,全球 60 岁以上的人口将达到 20 亿,这给老年人的心理健康带来了复杂的挑战。COVID-19 大流行增加了这一人群中抑郁症状的发病率,但对大流行后阶段的研究还不多:方法:我们于 2023 年对机构养老和非机构养老的老年人(总人数=525;机构养老=458;非机构养老=67)进行了一次横断面调查,这些老年人是通过方便抽样选出的。研究使用患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)评估是否存在抑郁症状,使用 WHOQOL-BREF 评估感知的生活质量,使用孤独感量表(UCLA)评估消极的孤独感。根据入院情况,对社会人口学、临床和社会心理特征与抑郁症状之间的关系拟合出无条件逻辑回归模型,计算出粗略调整后的几率比(ORs)和各自的 95% 置信区间(95%CIs)。最终模型对性别、年龄、QoL和孤独感进行了调整:在 525 名参与者中,74.6% 的非住院参与者没有抑郁症状或抑郁症状轻微,而 55.4% 的住院参与者属于这一类。25.4%的非住院参与者有轻度至中度严重抑郁症状。26.9% 的住院参与者有轻度症状,11.8% 有中度症状,3.9% 有中度严重症状,2.0% 有严重抑郁症状。总体而言,较高的生活质量与较低的抑郁症状水平相关。描述孤独感的参与者更有可能出现抑郁症状(OR = 78.10; 95%CI 2.90-2106.08 和 OR = 3.53; 95%CI 1.72-6.91,分别适用于非机构养老和机构养老的老年人),与机构养老状况无关:结论:老年人抑郁症状的发病率很高,这意味着抑郁症状在 COVID-19 大流行后并未减少。对生活质量的较低感知和消极的孤独感与抑郁症状的出现有关。这些结论表明,应制定计划,从抑郁症状、生活质量感知和消极孤独感等方面进行干预。
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来源期刊
Nursing Reports
Nursing Reports NURSING-
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
4.20%
发文量
78
期刊介绍: Nursing Reports is an open access, peer-reviewed, online-only journal that aims to influence the art and science of nursing by making rigorously conducted research accessible and understood to the full spectrum of practicing nurses, academics, educators and interested members of the public. The journal represents an exhilarating opportunity to make a unique and significant contribution to nursing and the wider community by addressing topics, theories and issues that concern the whole field of Nursing Science, including research, practice, policy and education. The primary intent of the journal is to present scientifically sound and influential empirical and theoretical studies, critical reviews and open debates to the global community of nurses. Short reports, opinions and insight into the plight of nurses the world-over will provide a voice for those of all cultures, governments and perspectives. The emphasis of Nursing Reports will be on ensuring that the highest quality of evidence and contribution is made available to the greatest number of nurses. Nursing Reports aims to make original, evidence-based, peer-reviewed research available to the global community of nurses and to interested members of the public. In addition, reviews of the literature, open debates on professional issues and short reports from around the world are invited to contribute to our vibrant and dynamic journal. All published work will adhere to the most stringent ethical standards and journalistic principles of fairness, worth and credibility. Our journal publishes Editorials, Original Articles, Review articles, Critical Debates, Short Reports from Around the Globe and Letters to the Editor.
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