Urban-rural differences in the association between social activities and depressive symptoms among older adults in China: a cross-sectional study

Oct 19, 2021BMC geriatrics

How social activities relate to depression in older adults living in cities versus rural areas in China

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Abstract

The prevalence of depressive symptoms was 25.2% in urban older adults compared to 40.7% in rural older adults.

  • Interaction with friends almost weekly or daily is associated with lower depressive symptoms among urban older adults.
  • Participation in community organizations almost daily is linked to reduced depressive symptoms in urban older adults.
  • Interacting with friends almost daily correlates with lower depressive symptoms in rural older adults.
  • Participation in hobby groups, either almost weekly or daily, is associated with decreased depressive symptoms among rural older adults.
  • Engagement in sports groups almost daily is linked to lower depressive symptoms in both urban and rural older adults.

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Key numbers

40.7%
Prevalence of Depressive Symptoms
Prevalence among rural older adults
25.2%
Prevalence of Depressive Symptoms
Prevalence among urban older adults
0.847
Odds Ratio for Daily Interaction
Odds ratio for rural older adults interacting with friends almost daily

Full Text

What this is

  • This study investigates the relationship between social activities and depressive symptoms among older adults in China, focusing on urban vs. rural differences.
  • Data from 8255 older adults reveal significant disparities in depressive symptoms based on social activity participation.
  • Findings indicate that urban older adults experience lower rates of depressive symptoms compared to their rural counterparts.

Essence

  • Rural older adults exhibit a higher prevalence of depressive symptoms (40.7%) compared to urban older adults (25.2%). Participation in social activities, particularly interacting with friends and engaging in sports groups, is inversely associated with depressive symptoms in both groups.

Key takeaways

  • Rural older adults show a higher prevalence of depressive symptoms at 40.7% vs. 25.2% in urban areas. This disparity may be linked to socioeconomic factors and access to social activities.
  • Interacting with friends almost daily is associated with lower depressive symptoms (OR = 0.847) among rural older adults, while urban counterparts benefit from weekly interactions (OR = 0.568).
  • Participation in sports groups is inversely associated with depressive symptoms for both urban (OR = 0.664) and rural (OR = 0.506) older adults, suggesting a common protective effect of physical activity.

Caveats

  • The cross-sectional design limits causal inferences between social activities and depressive symptoms. Depressive symptoms may hinder social participation.
  • Self-reported data may introduce recall bias, affecting the accuracy of reported social activities and depressive symptoms.
  • The study does not assess the quality of interpersonal interactions, which could influence the relationship between social activities and mental health.

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