Combined effect of living alone and osteoporosis status on the prevalence of depression in Chinese community-dwelling older population: a cross-sectional study
Pingping Cai, Siqin Gaowa, Cheng Lin, Peipei Han, Xiaoyu Chen, Jinwen Zhang, Cheng Chen, Qianhao Wu, Jingjie Miao, Shumei Zhang, Lihua Li, Talin SarNa, Qi Guo

TL;DR
This study finds that older Chinese people living alone with osteoporosis are more likely to have depression, especially men.
Contribution
The novel contribution is identifying the combined effect of living alone and osteoporosis on depression in older adults.
Findings
Living alone with osteoporosis is strongly linked to depression in older males.
Females living alone also show higher depression rates regardless of osteoporosis.
Osteoporosis alone does not significantly increase depression risk.
Abstract
Given the increasing burden of the “silent” depressive symptoms and the significant comorbidity of osteoporosis in the population living alone, this study aimed to investigate the separate and combined impacts of living alone and osteoporosis on the prevalence of depression in the older Chinese population. A total of 4,240 Chinese suburban-dwelling older individuals (mean age: 71.75 ± 5.88 years; 58.0% women) aged ≥60 years were recruited. Living arrangements were assessed by a questionnaire. Participants with a T score less than or equal to −2.5 were identified as osteoporosis. Participants were categorized into four groups based on their living status and osteoporosis prevalence: living with others and non-osteoporosis; living with others and osteoporosis; living alone and non-osteoporosis and living alone and osteoporosis groups. Depression was assessed by the Chinese version of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Cardiac Health and Mental Health · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
