1.Association of individual and area level socioeconomic status with depressive symptoms for older adults—evidence from China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study
Xu ZHANG ; Ziyuan WANG ; Shuduo ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Health Management 2024;18(2):114-119
Objective:To analyze the impact of individual and regional level socioeconomic characteristics on the mental health of middle-aged and older adults based on data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study.Methods:This study was a cohort study. Using the data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, subjects without depression were screened in the baseline survey, the depression status of the selected subjects was tracked and observed for seven years. Descriptive statistical analysis, multivariate logistic analysis, joint analysis were used to analyze the influence of factors such as gender, personal annual income, education level, urban and rural areas, and eastern, central, and western regions on the risk of depression among middle-aged and elderly people.Results:The 7-year follow-up results showed that the prevalence of depression symptoms in the study subjects was 42.24%; compared with men, women′s risk of developing depression symptoms was significantly increased ( OR=1.782); compared with junior college education and above, middle school (including technical secondary school), primary and lower education levels had a significantly increased risk of developing depression symptoms ( OR=1.476, 2.134); compared with annual income of more than 10 000 yuan, subjects with an annual income of 10 000 yuan or below had significantly increased risk of developing depression symptoms ( OR=1.251). At the same time, compared with the urban area, the risk of developing depression symptoms was significantly increased in the rural areas ( OR=1.389). Compared with the eastern area, the risk of developing depression symptoms was significantly higher in the central and western areas ( OR=1.342, 1.730). The joint analysis results showed that compared with high-income and high-education men, low-income low-education women, high-income low-education women, low-income middle-education women, and high-income middle-education women were at the top four odd ratios for developing depression symptoms ( OR=5.050, 3.662, 3.047, 2.641); compared with men in eastern cities, rural women in the west, rural women in the middle, women in the western cities, and rural women in the east ranked the first four odd ratios for developing depression symptoms ( OR=4.286, 3.216, 2.642, 2.158). Conclusion:Socioeconomic factors at the individual and regional levels have a significant impact on the risk of developing depressive symptoms in middle-aged and older adults, and mental health management of middle-aged and older adults with low socioeconomic status should be strengthened.
2.Global health governance for travel health: lessons learned from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreaks in large cruise ships
Shuduo ZHOU ; Lu HAN ; Peilong LIU ; Zhi-Jie ZHENG
Global Health Journal 2020;4(4):133-138
Background: The outbreak and global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) attracts a great deal of attentions to the problem of travel health. Cruise tourism is increasingly popular, with an estimated 30 million passengers transported on cruise ships worldwide each year. Safeguarding the health of cruise travelers during the entire travel is of ultimate importance for both the industry and global public health.Objective: This study aimed to explore the challenges and opportunities in travel health from the perspective of global health governance. Methods: The global governance framework including problems, values, tools or regulations, and actors related to travel health were used to analyze the issues involved. Results: Up to April 2020, nearly thirty cruise ship voyages reported COVID-19 cases. The Diamond Princess, Grand Princess and Ruby Princess cruise ship had over 1,400 total reported COVID-19 cases, and more than 30 deaths. A community with a common future in travel health is the core value of global health governance for travel health. The travel-related international regulations, including the International Health Regulation (IHR [2005]), United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) conventions should be further updated to deal with the travel health problems. The roles and responsibilities and the cooperation mechanisms of different actors are not clear in relation to the public health emergencies during the travel. Conclusion: Travel health transcends national borders and involves multilevel actors, thus needs global cooperation and governance. Regulations and legislation at global and country level are required to prevent large-scale humanitarian crisis on travel health. Multilateral coordination, cooperation and collaboration mechanisms between governments, intergovernmental organizations, non-governmental organizations and industry are needed to build a better community of common destiny for travel health.
3. COVID-19 Pandemic: global epidemiological trends and China’s subsequent preparedness and responses
Yan GUO ; Yangmu HUANG ; Jie HUANG ; Yinzi JIN ; Wen JIANG ; Peilong LIU ; Fangjing LIU ; Junxiong MA ; Jiyan MA ; Yu WANG ; Zheng XIE ; Hui YIN ; Chunshan ZHAO ; Shuduo ZHOU ; Ji ZHANG ; Zhijie ZHENG ; Zhijie ZHENG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2020;41(5):643-648
The outbreak of COVID-19 has spread quickly across 114 countries/territories/areas in six continents worldwide and has been announced as a pandemic by WHO. This study analyzed global COVID-19 epidemiological trends, examined impact of the pandemic on global health security, diplomacy, and social environment in China, and provided short- and long-term strategic policy recommendations for China’s subsequent preparedness and responses.