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. 2022 Dec 20;6(Suppl 1):276. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igac059.1094

NEIGHBORHOOD COHESION, LIVING ALONE, AND ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY IN COMMUNITY-DWELLING OLDER CHINESE AMERICANS

Yanping Jiang 1, Mengting Li 2, Tammy Chung 3
PMCID: PMC9765738

Abstract

This study aimed to examine whether neighborhood cohesion would mitigate the adverse effect of living alone on all-cause mortality in community-dwelling older Chinese Americans. Data were drawn from the Population Study of Chinese Elderly (PINE, N = 3,157, 59-105 years, 58% female), a longitudinal study started in 2011. Mortality was tracked through December 2021 (N = 642 deceased). Cox regression indicated that neighborhood cohesion moderated the association between living alone and all-cause mortality (HR = 0.74, 95%CI [0.57, 0.97]), showing that among participants living alone (N = 678), those with high neighborhood cohesion had a 41% lower mortality risk than their counterparts with low neighorhood cohesion. In contrast, among participants living with others, those with high and low neighborhood cohesion had a similar mortality risk. These findings highlight that strong neighborhood cohesion may protect against the increased risk of premature mortality associated with living alone in older Chinese Americans.


Articles from Innovation in Aging are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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