4.6 Article

Healthy aging and late-life depression in Europe: Does migration matter?

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2022.866524

关键词

late-life depression; healthy aging; migration; harmonized data; multivariate logistic regression

资金

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  2. 5-year Aging Trajectories of Health: Longitudinal Opportunities and Synergies (ATHLOS) project
  3. European Union [635316]
  4. GRBIO [E2987-3648]
  5. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (Spain) [2017 SGR 622]
  6. Marsden grant [CD20/00035]
  7. [PID2019-104830RB-I00]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study examined the differences between older migrants and non-migrants in terms of socioeconomic status, depression, multimorbidity, healthy aging, and lifestyle behaviors. The results showed that migrants had a higher prevalence of health conditions and depression, and worse healthy aging was associated with a higher risk of depressive symptoms in migrants.
BackgroundThere is limited research examining the impact of risk and protective factors on late-life depression using large population-based datasets, particularly those examining differences among older migrants and non-migrants in Europe countries. Thus, the first aim was to analyze differences between migrants and non-migrants regarding socioeconomic status, depression, multimorbidity, healthy aging, and lifestyle behaviors. The second aim was to examine the impact of healthy aging on late-life depression in older migrants compared to their counterparts without a history of international migration in extensive and harmonized data from different population-based cohort studies. Materials and methodsWe analyzed cross-sectional, predominantly nationally representative, community-based data from European participants in the Aging Trajectories of Health: Longitudinal Opportunities and Synergies (ATHLOS) cohort. The descriptive analyses included sociodemographic variables, somatic comorbidities, multimorbidity, healthy aging, and lifestyle behaviors according to migration status. The effects of these variables on late-life depression were examined in a multivariate logistic regression model, including migration status and years since migration as predictors. ResultsData of 122,571 individuals aged >= 50 years were analyzed, of which 11,799 (9.60%) were migrants. The descriptive analyses indicated that compared to non-migrants, migrants showed a higher prevalence of diabetes (25.6%), hypertension (38.0%), coronary artery disease (49.4%), stroke (4.9%), and depression (31.1%). Healthy aging was also better in non-migrants (51.7; SD = 9.7) than in migrants (39.6; SD = 18.2). The results of the logistic regression showed that migration status [OR = 1.231 (CIs: 0.914-1.547)] and increased number of years since migration in the host country [OR = 0.003 (CIs: 0.001-0.005)] were associated with greater levels of depressive symptoms. Concerning health variables, multimorbidity was associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms [OR = 0.244 (CIs: 0.211-0.278)], whereas better healthy aging was associated with fewer depressive symptoms [OR = -0.100 (CIs: -0.102 to -0.098)]. The interaction between migration and healthy aging status was also significant [OR. = -0.019 (CIs: -0.025 to -0.014)]. ConclusionMigrants reported higher risks for worse health outcomes compared to non-migrants. Significantly, worse healthy aging was associated with a greater risk of depressive symptoms in migrants than in non-migrants. Shedding light on migration and aging processes is essential for promoting a cross-cultural understanding of late-life depression in Europe.

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