Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China

Abstract Background Social participation (SP) is known to have a favourable impact on health. However, studies on this issue have been conducted mainly in advanced countries, and results in China have been mixed. This study examined the impact of SP on health outcomes of middle-aged and elderly adul...

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Main Authors: Xinxin Ma, Xiangdan Piao, Takashi Oshio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-04-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08650-4
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spelling doaj-1441cdef93c34a37afc58b6c3fc7f0482020-11-25T03:01:00ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582020-04-012011810.1186/s12889-020-08650-4Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in ChinaXinxin Ma0Xiangdan Piao1Takashi Oshio2Faculty of Social Sciences, University of ToyamaSchool of Engineering, Kyushu UniversityInstitute of Economic Research, Hitotsubashi UniversityAbstract Background Social participation (SP) is known to have a favourable impact on health. However, studies on this issue have been conducted mainly in advanced countries, and results in China have been mixed. This study examined the impact of SP on health outcomes of middle-aged and elderly adults in China, adjusted for simultaneity and heterogeneity biases. Methods In total, 57,417 observations of 28,935 individuals obtained from the population-based, three-wave panel survey, Chinese Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS), conducted in 2011, 2013, and 2015 were used. The associations between one- or two-wave-lagged SP and health outcomes (mental health, self-rated health [SRH], activities of daily living [ADL], and diagnosed diseases) were examined by linear regression models. Individual-level heterogeneity was addressed by the random-effects estimation method. Results SP was found to have a positive impact on mental health and ADL. Specifically, one-wave-lagged SP improved mental health measure (range: 10–70) by 0.820 (standard error [SE]: 0.199, p <  0.001), the basic ADL measure (range: 6–24) by 0.147 (SE: 0.043, p <  0.001), and the instrumental ADL measure (range: 5–20) by 0.159 (SE: 0.035, p <  0.001). In contrast, SP did not significantly affect SRH or diagnosed diseases. The impact of SP differed by SP type; playing Mah-jong (Chinese traditional game), chess, or cards, or going to the community club had the most favourable effect. The impact of SP on health was also greater for women than men and greater for individuals aged 60–69 years than those aged 45–59 years and aged 70 and older. Conclusions SP had a positive, albeit selective, impact on health outcomes among middle-aged and elderly adults in China. The results suggest that policy measures to encourage these individuals to engage in SP are needed to enhance their health.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08650-4ChinaHealth outcomesMiddle-aged and elderlyLagged variablesSocial participation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xinxin Ma
Xiangdan Piao
Takashi Oshio
spellingShingle Xinxin Ma
Xiangdan Piao
Takashi Oshio
Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China
BMC Public Health
China
Health outcomes
Middle-aged and elderly
Lagged variables
Social participation
author_facet Xinxin Ma
Xiangdan Piao
Takashi Oshio
author_sort Xinxin Ma
title Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China
title_short Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China
title_full Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China
title_fullStr Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China
title_full_unstemmed Impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in China
title_sort impact of social participation on health among middle-aged and elderly adults: evidence from longitudinal survey data in china
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Abstract Background Social participation (SP) is known to have a favourable impact on health. However, studies on this issue have been conducted mainly in advanced countries, and results in China have been mixed. This study examined the impact of SP on health outcomes of middle-aged and elderly adults in China, adjusted for simultaneity and heterogeneity biases. Methods In total, 57,417 observations of 28,935 individuals obtained from the population-based, three-wave panel survey, Chinese Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS), conducted in 2011, 2013, and 2015 were used. The associations between one- or two-wave-lagged SP and health outcomes (mental health, self-rated health [SRH], activities of daily living [ADL], and diagnosed diseases) were examined by linear regression models. Individual-level heterogeneity was addressed by the random-effects estimation method. Results SP was found to have a positive impact on mental health and ADL. Specifically, one-wave-lagged SP improved mental health measure (range: 10–70) by 0.820 (standard error [SE]: 0.199, p <  0.001), the basic ADL measure (range: 6–24) by 0.147 (SE: 0.043, p <  0.001), and the instrumental ADL measure (range: 5–20) by 0.159 (SE: 0.035, p <  0.001). In contrast, SP did not significantly affect SRH or diagnosed diseases. The impact of SP differed by SP type; playing Mah-jong (Chinese traditional game), chess, or cards, or going to the community club had the most favourable effect. The impact of SP on health was also greater for women than men and greater for individuals aged 60–69 years than those aged 45–59 years and aged 70 and older. Conclusions SP had a positive, albeit selective, impact on health outcomes among middle-aged and elderly adults in China. The results suggest that policy measures to encourage these individuals to engage in SP are needed to enhance their health.
topic China
Health outcomes
Middle-aged and elderly
Lagged variables
Social participation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-08650-4
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