key: cord-0828060-lontct90 authors: Tian, Tingting; Kong, Fanlei; Li, Shixue title: Effects of Living Conditions, Subjective Integration, and Social Networks on Health-Related Quality of Life among the Migrant Elderly Following Children in Jinan, China date: 2021-04-02 journal: Healthcare (Basel) DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9040414 sha: 014e68ae72b6340ce1030a1e493772a7605d218a doc_id: 828060 cord_uid: lontct90 With accelerated urbanization in China, an increasing number of the migrant elderly following children (MEFC) have appeared. This study aims to explore the effects of living conditions, subjective integration, and social networks on the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of MEFC in Jinan, China. HRQOL was assessed by the 12-item Short-Form Health Survey, which included the mental component summary (MCS) and the physical component summary (PCS). Univariate analyses and binary logistic regression were used to investigate the association between the above indicators and HRQOL. A total of 656 MEFC were selected by multi-stage cluster random sampling, 25.2% and 25.0% of whom were defined as poor MCS and poor PCS, respectively. Those who understood the local dialect, could trust others, and connected with friends were more likely to have good MCS; those with a nanny, faulty elevator, and no support from their spouse were the reverse. MEFC who were trans-city, had no elevator or a faulty elevator, and went to the hospital alone were more likely to have poor PCS; those who approved of living conditions in their hometowns were the reverse. Results indicated that better living conditions, stronger subjective integration, and wider social networks led to higher HRQOL of MEFC. Implications of the government, communities, and families of MEFC were given to improve their HRQOL. Over the past decades, with the rapid development of China's economy and the general improvement in medical technology, the process of aging and urbanization has gradually intensified, and the scale of population mobility has been constantly expanding [1] . From 1990 to 2015, the number of internal migrant populations increased from 21.35 million to 247 million [2] . Influenced by Confucian culture, the elderly in China traditionally migrated to a new place to take care of their grandchildren and reunite with their family [3] ; they have come to be referred to as the migrant elderly following children (MEFC). As a result, the number of the migrant elderly reached 13.04 million in 2015, accounting for 5.3% of the total migrant population [2] . This redistribution of the elderly population brought some public health challenges, such as poor health outcomes [4] , transmission of infectious diseases [5, 6] , inequalities in using essential public health services [7] , and excessive growth of urban medical expenses [8] . Consequently, the health status of MEFC is a key issue worthy of attention. Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is defined as an individual's satisfaction or happiness with the quality of their physical and mental health and is deemed a comprehensive assessment tool of a population's health status [9] . It was found that elderly Iranian migrants in Sweden had a worse HRQOL compared to Swedish natives [10] . A lower (≈157,285.51 million USD) [36] . As of 1 July 2020, Jinan had 10 districts and 2 counties (132 sub-districts and 29 towns) under its jurisdiction [37] . By the end of 2019, the local resident population was 8.91 million, while the registered population was 7.98 million [38] . There were 2.9 million migrants in Jinan in 2019 [39] ; those who were older than 60 years and followed their children to Jinan were the subjects of this study. Multi-stage cluster random sampling was used to select the participants. In the first stage of the data collection, three districts were chosen from the 10 districts as the primary sampling units (PSUs), considering their economic development and geographic location. In the second stage, a total of three sub-districts were selected from each of the PSUs as the secondary sampling units (SSUs). In the third stage, three communities were selected from each of the SSUs. All the migrants who were older than 60 years and followed their children to Jinan in these three communities constituted the total sample of this study. In total, 32 university students became investigators for this study after receiving training regarding the background information of the study, contents of the questionnaire, and techniques of social survey. The investigators conducted approximately twenty-minute face-to-face interviews with the subjects to collect the data. A total of 670 MEFC were initially selected and interviewed. However, 14 of them were excluded due to obvious logical errors in their responses or uncompleted questionnaires. A total of 656 participants were ultimately included in the study. The Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12), consisting of 12 items drawn from the eight subscales of the SF-36 [40] , is widely used to measure HRQOL [41] and has been tested as a scale with good reliability and validity [42] . The Chinese-translated version of the SF-12 questionnaire has been reported to be suitable for the elderly in China [43, 44] . In this study, HRQOL of MEFC was assessed by SF-12 scores that were divided into the mental component summary (MCS) and the physical component summary (PCS) scores for calculation [45] . Each participant's MCS and PCS were dichotomized by the cut-off point of the first quartile of MCS and PCS scores, and we defined poor HRQOL as scores lower than that of the first quartile [46, 47] . Social demographic characteristics, which were collected as a basis for comparison, included age, gender, marital status, education, duration in inflow area, hiring a nanny, and migration space range. Living conditions were captured by three indicators, including two objective indicators of current residence, "type of housing" and "elevator faults", and one subjective evaluation of "living conditions in hometown." Subjective integration was mainly measured through the dimensions of acculturation and self-identity. Factors including "local dialect" and "trust others around you" were used to measure the dimension of acculturation. Self-identity was measured by the question "Do you feel like a local?" Social networks in this study were measured through two dimensions: family relationships and social relationships. Participants' family relationships were measured by their responses to four questions: "Do you have different consumption values from your children?" "Do your children work overtime at home because of their busy schedule?" "Have you gone to the hospital without children's company for fear of troubling them?" "Do you have support from your spouse?" Social relationships were measured by two indicators: "number of local friends" and "relationships with friends and colleagues." All statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS 24.0, and p-values less than 0.05 were regarded as statistically significant. Chi-square test was used to calculate the differences in MCS and PCS among the subgroups of each categorical variable. After univariate analyses, statistically significant variables were included in the logistic regression analyses. Three binary logistic regression models with an enter method were adopted to explore the associations between independent variables and HRQOL. Meanwhile, crude odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were calculated. First, social demographic characteristics and living conditions entered Model 1, then the indicators of subjective integration were brought into Model 2, and finally the variables of social networks were added to Model 3. The basic information of social demographic characteristics, living conditions, subjective integration, and social networks of 656 participants is provided in Table 1 . It was shown that 57.9% of the sample was 63 to 68 years old. Most respondents were female (63.7%), married (88.9%), had an education level of junior school and below (81.1%), did not hire a nanny (99.1%), stayed in the inflow area for less than six years (66.0%), and were trans-city migrants (67.2%). As for living conditions, 83.5% of the participants lived in high-rise residential buildings, 28.8% had no elevator in their houses, and more than half of them (50.5%) provided a good evaluation of living conditions in their hometowns. With regard to subjective integration, nearly 50% of MEFC said that there were different degrees of dialect barriers, 39.2% did not feel like a local, and less than 10% rarely or never trusted others around them. In terms of social networks, most participants had local friends (86.1%) and support from their spouse (82.8%), frequently contacted friends and colleagues (45.3%), had no different consumption values from their children (58.1%), and had never gone to the hospital without children's company (58.4%). Additionally, 58.1% of the children of MEFC never worked overtime at home. As shown in Table 1 , factors that were significantly different in MCS included hiring a nanny (p < 0.05), type of housing (p < 0.05), elevator faults (p < 0.001), local dialect (p < 0.01), trusting others (p < 0.05), support from their spouse (p < 0.05), and relationships with friends and colleagues (p < 0.05). As for PCS, there were statistically significant differences in age (p < 0.05), migration space range (p < 0.01), type of housing (p < 0.001), elevator faults (p < 0.001), living conditions in their hometowns (p < 0.05), local dialect (p < 0.05), feeling like a local (p < 0.05), different consumption values from children (p < 0.05), children working overtime at home (p < 0.01), going to the hospital alone (p < 0.01), support from their spouse (p < 0.05), number of local friends (p < 0.05), and relationships with friends and colleagues (p < 0.05). Tables 2 and 3 display the p-values, OR, and 95% CI for the association of the significant variables after univariate analyses with MCS and PCS, respectively. The collinearity diagnostics' results revealed that the tolerances of all independent variables were much greater than 0.1, and the variance inflation factors were far less than 10, suggesting that there was no multicollinearity between independent variables in three logistic regression models. In Table 2 , the results of Model 1 indicate that hiring a nanny and elevator faults were significant factors of MCS. When variables of subjective integration entered Model 2, these two variables were still statistically significant. Local dialect and rarely trusting others emerged as statistically significant. In Model 3, the Hosmer and Lemeshow test showed the p-value (p = 0.449) was greater than 0.05 and the percentage accuracy in classification was 75.8%, indicating a high prediction effect. Model 3 presented that living conditions, subjective integration, and social networks were statistically associated with MCS. Specifically, MEFC who often had elevator faults (p = 0.008, OR = 0.135), were able to understand or speak local dialect (p < 0.01, OR < 1), could trust others (p = 0.023, OR = 0.087), and kept frequent contact with friends and colleagues (p = 0.035, OR = 0.492) were more likely to have good MCS, but for those who hired a nanny (p = 0.035, OR = 6.476), sometimes had elevator faults (p = 0.042, OR = 1.657), and had no support from their spouse (p = 0.039, OR = 1.826), the scores were reversed. As shown in Table 3 , migration space range and elevator faults were significant predictors of PCS in Model 1. However, as subjective integration was added to Model 2, the significance of migration space range disappeared. With a p-value greater than 0.05 in the Hosmer and Lemeshow test and 81.7% accuracy in classification, the results of Model 3 indicated that migration space range, living conditions, and social networks were significantly associated with PCS. Specifically, the elderly who were trans-city migrants (p = 0.040, OR = 1.860), had no elevator in their houses (p < 0.001, OR = 5.922) or sometimes had elevator faults (p = 0.029, OR = 1.988), and had sometimes (p = 0.049, OR = 1.832) or often (p = 0.031, OR = 2.265) gone to the hospital alone were more likely to suffer from poor PCS, and those who gave a good (p = 0.010, OR = 0.316) or fair (p = 0.025, OR = 0.341) evaluation of living conditions in their hometowns were more likely to have good PCS. In this study, the mean scores of MCS and PCS were 55.44 ± 7.10 and 48.51 ± 9.59, respectively. Compared with community-dwelling elderly in Zhejiang, China [48] , the MCS scores of MEFC were higher and PCS scores were similar. This may be because family reunions are beneficial to the mental health of the migrant elderly [49] . The present study demonstrated that living conditions were associated with HRQOL of MEFC. Some studies have suggested that recreational amenities [50] , home amenities, and community safety [51] are influencing factors in migrants' HRQOL. The absence of an elevator or an occasional faulty elevator in the residence would not only cause adverse effects on the physical health of MEFC [52] , but also increase anxiety for their own safety. However, the results showed that frequent elevator faults were associated with better MCS. A possible reason could be that it typically took a long time for the rural elderly to use the infrastructure and electronic devices in the city, which might be embarrassing for them [53] . The elevator faults gave them an excuse to attribute their slowness to faulty equipment, which would make them feel relaxed. Another reason might be that the elderly would not want to use elevators with very frequent faults, in order to avoid being frightened or injured. Furthermore, relatively good evaluations of living conditions in their hometowns were proven to be a protective factor of PCS. Somewhat dissimilar from our findings, a previous study reported that the stronger the hometown identity, the lower the life satisfaction of Chinese rural migrants [54] . Nevertheless, when we considered the traditional concept of the missing hometown of most Chinese elderly people [55] , our results were understandable. For the elderly who migrated to a new city following their children, the house in their hometown served not only as an accommodation when they visited their relatives during the traditional festivals, but also as a kind of emotional sustenance. Hence, better living conditions in migrants' hometowns may contribute to a better health status for MEFC. This study demonstrated that the impact of subjective integration on HRQOL of MEFC was greater on the mental aspect (MCS) through the dimension of acculturation, compared with the physical aspect (PCS). Language barriers have always been one of the most difficult issues affecting the normal work and life of migrants in the inflow area [56] [57] [58] . Moreover, China has a variety of traditional cultures and dialects. Although Mandarin is a common language in China, there are still obstacles for the majority of MEFC to communicate smoothly with the local people. Similarly, those who could not understand or speak the local dialect reported the poorest MCS in our study because they were forced to stay at home and unable to connect with their peers around them. Additionally, we found that trusting others had a significant positive influence on MCS. Numerous studies illustrated this point: less trust in others was directly associated with poorer self-rated health status of Mexican-Americans in Texas [59] ; distrust reduced the quality of life of rural-to-urban migrants [60] ; and compared with the local urban elderly, the migrant elderly reported lower trust and a higher risk of mental illness [61] . Thus, helping MEFC establish a sense of trust with others is one of the keys to improving their HRQOL. Social networks have been found to be associated with HRQOL. Having support from spouses and close relationships with friends and colleagues demonstrated significant differences in MCS. According to other studies, spouses may be able to provide stability and emotional comfort for the migrant elderly [62] and may make a vital contribution to developing healthy behavioral habits [63] . High levels of social activity with friends decreased negative effects on the well-being of older adults [64] , and both the quality and frequency of contact with friends were strongly related [65] . Therefore, as new members of a community, harmonious relations with their spouses and local friends could help MEFC become a part of the inflow area, which could not be replaced by a good relationship with their children. Moreover, we took MEFC's experience of going to the hospital without their children's company for fear of troubling them as one of the indicators to assess their family relationships in this study. As indicated above, this kind of experience had a negative impact on their PCS, because the original health status of the elderly with medical needs might be relatively low. In addition, falls have been one of the main factors threatening old people's health, and often occur in public places [66] . It is generally known that the company of children could reduce the possibility of elderly falls. In terms of demographic characteristics, the significant predictors of HRQOL were hiring a nanny at home and migration space range. Hiring a nanny was a risk factor for MCS of MEFC, probably because the elderly and nannies had different views on taking care of their grandchildren. Nannies usually receive professional training and adopt more scientific methods, while the elderly tend to follow their traditional experiences [67] . Regarding migration space range, the elderly with trans-city migration had a lower PCS than those who migrated across the county, which was consistent with previous research results. Long-distance migration would bring greater risks and more losses to the elderly; the migrant elderly had to leave their familiar physical environment, cultural atmosphere, and interpersonal relationships [68, 69] . The wholeness of their daily lives changed dramatically and was more challenging, which was harmful to their HRQOL. To improve the HRQOL of MEFC, the government may take the following measures. First, on the basis of protecting the diversity of traditional culture, continue to promote the popularization of Mandarin to alleviate the obstacles of dialect among the elderly, vigorously promote the construction of an elderly-friendly city, and reinforce the safety of public facilities so that the elderly can live in a safe and convenient social environment. Second, as the central living space of MEFC, the community plays an important role in improving their HRQOL and is supposed to conduct more recreational activities, so as to increase opportunities for MEFC to build close friendships and trust with the local residents. Meanwhile, it is an essential responsibility of the community to maintain the security of its infrastructure. Last but not least, the children of MEFC should accompany and be filial toward their parents in order to create a happy family atmosphere. There are several limitations to this study. First, we used data from a cross-sectional study, so the causal relationship could not be predicted. Second, due to the lack of a systematic scale on living conditions, subjective integration, and social networks in the questionnaire, we only selected some relevant indicators to conduct our evaluation, which was expected to be remedied in the follow-up study. Finally, affected by COVID-19, our study failed to conduct the survey in Shanghai as planned and only selected MEFC in Jinan as the research object, which might not represent HRQOL of MEFC in China. In summary, to the best of our knowledge, this was the first study to explore the determinants of HRQOL among Chinese MEFC from the perspective of living conditions, subjective integration, and social networks. The results indicated that the better the living conditions, the stronger the subjective integration, and the wider the social networks, the higher the HRQOL of MEFC. Understanding the local dialect, trusting others, and maintaining contact with friends positively impacted MCS, but hiring a nanny, sometimes having elevator faults, and having no support from their spouse impacted MCS negatively. Trans-city migration, elevator faults, and going to the hospital alone had negative effects on PCS, and better evaluations of living conditions in their hometowns reversed this effect. Author Contributions: T.T. analyzed the data and drafted the manuscript. F.K. applied to the fund to support this study; designed the study; completed the questionnaire design; supervised and joined the data collection; instructed the writing, statistical analysis, and data processing; and provided comments on the modification of the manuscript. S.L. gave many valuable comments on the draft and also polished it. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Informed Consent Statement: Informed consent for data collection and use of the data were obtained from all subjects. The data are available on request from the corresponding author in this study. The data are not publicly available due to privacy restrictions. The research team greatly appreciates the funding support and research participants for their cooperation and support. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Research progress of the elderly migrant following child at home and abroad. Chin National Health and Family Planning Commission of China (NHFPC) National Health Commission of the People's Republic of China Migrant elders in Hainan, China, report better health and lower depression than local-born elderly residents Health of the Elderly Migration Population in China: Benefit from Individual and Local Socioeconomic Status? 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