4.5 Article

Neighborhood Built Environment and Late-Life Depression: A Multilevel Path Analysis in a Chinese Society

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/geronb/gbab037

Keywords

Age-friendliness; Living environments; Mental health; Multilevel models

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Housing Society
  2. Human Research Ethics Committee of the University of Hong Kong [EA050814]

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The study found that urban greenness and the number of commercial facilities in the neighborhood were directly related to late-life depression. Social activities played a mediating role in the relationship with depressive symptoms within a 200-meter buffer, while functional ability acted as a mediator within a 500-meter buffer.
Objectives: Neighborhood built environments (BEs) are increasingly recognized as being associated with late-life depression. However, their pathways are still understudied. This study investigates the mediating effects of physical and social activities (PA and SA) and functional ability (FA) in the relationships between BEs and late-life depression. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis with data from 2,081 community-dwellers aged 65 years and older in Hong Kong in 2014. Two road-network-based service area buffers (200- and 500-m buffers) adjusted by terrain and slope from participants' residences were created to define the scope of neighborhoods. BEs comprised population density in District Council Constituency Areas, urban greenness, land-use diversity, and neighborhood facilities within 200- and 500-m buffers. Multilevel path analysis models were used. Results: More urban greenness within both buffers and more commercial facilities within a 500-m buffer were directly associated with fewer depressive symptoms. SA mediated the relationship between the number of community facilities and depressive symptoms within a 200-m buffer. Neighborhood urban greenness and the number of commercial facilities had indirect associations on depressive symptoms within a 500-m buffer, which were mediated by FA. Discussion: Our findings have implications for the ecological model of aging. The mediating effects of SA and FA underscore the importance of promoting active social lifestyles and maintaining FA for older adults' mental health in high-density cities. Policy implications on how to build age-friendly communities are discussed.

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