Correlates of Mental Illness among Older Adults Using Community Welfare Centers in South Korea
Jung eun Yun, Sangyong Cho, Jihee Kang, Sueun Shin, Minjin Kim, Young Woo Kim, Jin-Ah Sim, Dong-Soo Shin

TL;DR
This study explores factors linked to mental illness in older adults using welfare centers in South Korea, highlighting age, gender, and social support as key factors.
Contribution
The study identifies specific correlates of mental illness among older adults in community welfare centers, offering insights for tailored support programs.
Findings
Older age was associated with a lower likelihood of mental illness.
Women were more likely to have mental illness compared to men.
Mutual help within the community was positively linked to mental illness.
Abstract
This study examined differences by the presence of mental illness among community welfare center users in an urban–rural complex city. As South Korea pursues deinstitutionalization for people with mental illness, welfare centers must adapt their roles to meet community needs. A cross-sectional survey was conducted with 153 older adults from two community welfare centers. The dependent variable was the presence of mental illness (0 = no, 1 = yes). Independent variables included mental health confidence, age, gender, education, income, living-alone, self-rated health, exercise, diet, marital status, and social capital (trust in neighbors, mutual help). Logistic regression analysis was performed. The model was significant (adjusted R² = 0.346, p < 0.001). Older age was linked to lower likelihood of mental illness (OR = 0.89, p = 0.004), while women showed higher likelihood than men (OR =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFamily Caregiving in Mental Illness · Health disparities and outcomes · Mental Health Treatment and Access
