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REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS

BACKGROUND: The lockdown due to COVID-19 has influenced individuals’ lives in many aspects. Yet, the impact of reopening under an ongoing pandemic is understudied. This study aims to investigate the impact of reopening policy on older Asian Americans’ depressive symptoms and whether the impact varie...

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Autores principales: Lou, Yifan, Cheung, Ethan Siu Leung, Liu, Jinyu, Wu, Bei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766122/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1260
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author Lou, Yifan
Cheung, Ethan Siu Leung
Liu, Jinyu
Wu, Bei
author_facet Lou, Yifan
Cheung, Ethan Siu Leung
Liu, Jinyu
Wu, Bei
author_sort Lou, Yifan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The lockdown due to COVID-19 has influenced individuals’ lives in many aspects. Yet, the impact of reopening under an ongoing pandemic is understudied. This study aims to investigate the impact of reopening policy on older Asian Americans’ depressive symptoms and whether the impact varies by their sociodemographic characteristics.Method: We used interview data collected from 519 Chinese and Korean aged 60 and older in New York City between 5/23/2021 to 7/30/2021. Interrupted time series model was used to test whether there are significant level and slope changes in depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 scale) before and after the reopening on 7/1/2021 in NYC. We then ran the models in stratified sample by gender, education, income, self-reported health, and social connectedness through living arrangements, use of technology, and social interactions. RESULTS: Older Asians’ depression increased immediately following the reopening (ß=1.52, p< 0.05), and then slowly decreased then after (ß=-0.12, p< 0.001). A decrease in depression following reopening was significantly associated with the male gender, good health, higher income, living alone, having received or provided social support, daily texting, and no engagement in the discussions related to COVID-19 in social media. Discussions: While reopening may have long-term benefits on mental health, older Asians were anxious about their safety at the beginning of reopening under an ongoing pandemic. Older adults with worse health, lower SES, and limited social connectedness struggled to adjust to “back-to-normal” life. We discussed research, policy, and practice implications to support these disadvantaged older adults after reopening.
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spelling pubmed-97661222022-12-20 REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS Lou, Yifan Cheung, Ethan Siu Leung Liu, Jinyu Wu, Bei Innov Aging Abstracts BACKGROUND: The lockdown due to COVID-19 has influenced individuals’ lives in many aspects. Yet, the impact of reopening under an ongoing pandemic is understudied. This study aims to investigate the impact of reopening policy on older Asian Americans’ depressive symptoms and whether the impact varies by their sociodemographic characteristics.Method: We used interview data collected from 519 Chinese and Korean aged 60 and older in New York City between 5/23/2021 to 7/30/2021. Interrupted time series model was used to test whether there are significant level and slope changes in depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 scale) before and after the reopening on 7/1/2021 in NYC. We then ran the models in stratified sample by gender, education, income, self-reported health, and social connectedness through living arrangements, use of technology, and social interactions. RESULTS: Older Asians’ depression increased immediately following the reopening (ß=1.52, p< 0.05), and then slowly decreased then after (ß=-0.12, p< 0.001). A decrease in depression following reopening was significantly associated with the male gender, good health, higher income, living alone, having received or provided social support, daily texting, and no engagement in the discussions related to COVID-19 in social media. Discussions: While reopening may have long-term benefits on mental health, older Asians were anxious about their safety at the beginning of reopening under an ongoing pandemic. Older adults with worse health, lower SES, and limited social connectedness struggled to adjust to “back-to-normal” life. We discussed research, policy, and practice implications to support these disadvantaged older adults after reopening. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9766122/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1260 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Lou, Yifan
Cheung, Ethan Siu Leung
Liu, Jinyu
Wu, Bei
REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
title REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
title_full REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
title_fullStr REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
title_full_unstemmed REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
title_short REOPENING UNDER COVID-19: THE IMPACT OF REOPENING SOCIETY ON OLDER ASIAN AMERICAN’S DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
title_sort reopening under covid-19: the impact of reopening society on older asian american’s depressive symptoms
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766122/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1260
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