Longitudinal Associations Between Neighborhood Disorder, Diabetes, and Depressive Symptoms in Later Life
Seungjong Cho, Jiao Yu

TL;DR
Neighborhood disorder may worsen mental health by increasing diabetes risk, according to a study using data from over 5,000 people over ten years.
Contribution
This study identifies a biological pathway linking neighborhood disorder to depressive symptoms through metabolic dysregulation.
Findings
Higher neighborhood disorder was associated with increased HbA1c levels.
Elevated HbA1c levels predicted higher depressive symptoms over time.
The indirect effect of neighborhood disorder on depression via HbA1c was statistically significant.
Abstract
Neighborhood environments are increasingly recognized as determinants of mental health, yet the biological pathways linking neighborhood stressors to depressive symptomatology remain underexplored. Chronic exposure to neighborhood physical disorder, characterized by visible signs of neglect such as vandalism and poorly maintained infrastructure, may activate physiological stress responses that disrupt metabolic regulation, elevating the risk of diabetes and related complications. Moreover, diabetes-related metabolic dysregulation has been connected to the development of depressive symptoms, yet the underlying mechanisms warrant further investigation. To address this gap, we examined whether metabolic dysregulation, measured by hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), mediates the association between perceived neighborhood physical disorder and depressive symptoms. Using longitudinal data from the Health…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Green Space and Health · Health disparities and outcomes · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
