Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/3984
Title: Mediating effect of decline in social activities on urinary incontinence and negative mood: Do sex and marital differences exist?
Author(s): Chong, Alice Ming Lin 
Author(s): Bai, X.
Leung, D. Y. P.
Lai, C. K. Y.
Chi, I.
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Journal: Geriatrics & Gerontology International 
Volume: 17
Issue: 11
Start page: 1829
End page: 1836
Abstract: 
Aim
We tested the mediating effect of decline in social participation on urinary incontinence (UI) and negative mood in older adults by sex and marital status.

Methods
We carried out secondary analysis of data collected from 5301 Chinese adults aged 60 years or older in Hong Kong who had completed an initial screening instrument for subsidized long-term care services in 2010. Path analysis within structural equation modeling was carried out.

Results
Satisfactory model fit was obtained: male–married group (n = 1949, standardized root means squared residual [SRMR] = 0.034, robust root mean square error of approximation [R-RMSEA] = 0.045, robust comparative fit index [R-CFI] = 0.965), male–other group (n = 519, SRMR = 0.023, R-RMSEA = 0.011, R-CFI = 0.988), female–married group (n = 948, SRMR = 0.018, R-RMSEA = 0.002, R-CFI = 1.000) and female–other group (n = 2251, SRMR = 0.023, R-RMSEA = 0.048, R-CFI = 0.970). In the male–married subsample, UI had both a significant direct effect (β = 0.046) and significant indirect effect on mood through decline in social participation (β = 0.021); for the female–other subsample, UI (β = 0.058) and decline in social participation (β = 0.335) had significant direct effects on negative mood. Decline in social participation had a significant direct effect on negative mood in the male–other subsample (β = 0.306) and the female–married subsample (β = 0.325).

Conclusions
Decline in social participation mediated the relationship between UI and negative mood in married older men, but not male–other group or women. It is important to recognize these sex and marital status differences, and expand social participation opportunities for UI patients.
URI: https://repository.cihe.edu.hk/jspui/handle/cihe/3984
DOI: 10.1111/ggi.12976
CIHE Affiliated Publication: No
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