# Examining Multilevel Influences on Depressive Symptoms Among Korean Older Adults: The Interplay of Individual and Regional Factors

**Authors:** Miri Kim, Soondool Chung

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare13080870 · 2025-04-10

## TL;DR

This study explores how personal and regional factors together affect depression in older adults in South Korea, highlighting the role of social isolation and age-friendly environments.

## Contribution

The study identifies social isolation as a key mediator linking psychological and environmental factors to depression in older adults.

## Key findings

- Aging anxiety increases social isolation and depressive symptoms in older adults.
- Age-friendly environments reduce social isolation, which in turn lowers depressive symptoms.
- Social isolation mediates the relationship between aging anxiety and depression.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: This study investigates how individual- and regional-level factors jointly influence depressive symptoms among older adults in South Korea, a rapidly aging society facing growing mental health concerns. Methods: Multilevel structural equation modelling with Monte Carlo confidence interval testing is used to analyze a cross-sectional, secondary dataset of 600 Korean older adults aged 65 years. The data come from the 2020 Ewha Study of Intergenerational Issues (ESoII), which is collected using multistage-quota sampling by age, gender, and region to ensure population representativeness across 14 cities and provinces. Results: Significant direct and indirect effects are observed at both individual and regional levels. At the individual level, aging anxiety is associated with social isolation (β = 0.208, p > 001) and depressive symptoms (β = 0.224, p < 0.001); social isolation is also associated with depressive symptoms (β = 0.288, p > 0.001), and mediates the relationship between aging anxiety and depression (95% CI = [0.016, 0.065]). At the regional level, age-friendly environments are associated with social isolation (β = −0.287, p < 0.05), which in turn is associated with depressive symptoms (β = 0.403, p < 0.01). The mediation effect of social isolation in the relationship between age-friendly environments and depressive symptoms is statistically significant (95% CI = [−0.022, −0.004]). Conclusions: The findings suggest that social isolation is a key mechanism linking both psychological and environmental risk factors to depression in later life. Promoting age-friendly environments may be an effective strategy for reducing social isolation and improving mental health outcomes among older adults. Interventions should consider both individual vulnerabilities and structural supports.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** social (OMIM:300082), Depressive Symptoms (MESH:D003866), anxiety (MESH:D001007)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12026624