Living Alone and Depressive Symptoms Among Older Japanese: Do Urbanization and Time Period Matter?

Author:

Kobayashi Erika1ORCID,Harada Ken2,Okamoto Shohei1ORCID,Liang Jersey34

Affiliation:

1. Research Team for Social Participation and Community Health, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology , Itabashi-ku, Tokyo , Japan

2. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Jissen Women’s University , Shibuya-ku, Tokyo , Japan

3. School of Public Health, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, Michigan , USA

4. Department of Health Care Management and Healthy Aging Research Center, Chang Gung University , Taoyuan City , Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Previous research has suggested cross-national differences in the association between living alone and well-being among older adults. This study examined whether the association varied across social contexts within the country, Japan, in terms of varying degree of urbanization and differential time periods. Methods Data were obtained from a nine-wave nationwide longitudinal survey with a probability sample of Japanese adults aged 60 years and over. Respondents belonged to one of the three periods (around 1990, 2000, and 2015) according to the year they commenced participation. As many as 4,655 individuals from 575 municipalities provided 9,016 observation sets of two consecutive waves (t − 1 and t). Within a framework of the Hierarchical Generalized Linear Model, depressive symptoms at t were predicted based on changes in living arrangements from t − 1 to t and their cross-level interactions with gender, level of urbanization, and time period, controlling for various covariates at t − 1. Results In general, older adults living alone continuously as well as those who started living alone between the waves showed more depressive symptoms than those coresiding with someone continuously. However, this tendency was more prominent among rural residents than their urban counterparts, especially for men. Moreover, the effect of continuously living alone on depressive symptoms became smaller in Period 2015 than that in Period 1990, because of the increase in depressiveness in coresident older adults. Discussion Our findings indicate that living alone has a differential effect on older adults’ well-being depending on the social context where residents’ preferences for living arrangements and availability of formal services could vary.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference53 articles.

1. Transitions in living arrangements among elders in Japan: Does health make a difference?;Brown;The Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences,2002

2. Urbanization and mental health in China: Linking the 2010 Population Census with a cross-sectional survey;Chen;International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health,2015

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