Perceived neighborhood characteristics and wellbeing: Exploring mediational pathways

The present study evaluated possible mediators of the association between perceived neighborhood characteristics and wellbeing. Both objective: social participation, community engagement, and number of chronic conditions and subjective: loneliness, perceived discrimination, and subjective health ind...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental psychology 2023-06, Vol.88, p.102020, Article 102020
1. Verfasser: Ayalon, Liat
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present study evaluated possible mediators of the association between perceived neighborhood characteristics and wellbeing. Both objective: social participation, community engagement, and number of chronic conditions and subjective: loneliness, perceived discrimination, and subjective health indicators were examined as possible mediators. The health and retirement study is a longitudinal panel survey consisting of a representative sample of US citizens over the age of 50. Analysis was based on data collected in 2010, 2014, and 2018. A total of 5590–5851 participants were included in the analyses. Path models were conducted to examine mediation, using 5000 bootstraps. Even after controlling for sociodemographic variables, there was a significant association between perceived neighborhood characteristics measured in 2010 and wellbeing measured in 2018. This association was partially mediated by loneliness, perceived discrimination, and subjective health measured in 2014, but not by community engagement, social participation, and number of chronic conditions. In a sensitivity analysis, some of the objective indicators partially accounted for the relationship between perceived neighborhood characteristics and the subjective indicators. The findings point to the importance of subjective mediators, rather than objective ones in explaining the association between perceived neighborhood characteristics and wellbeing. Hence, they call for further attention to the subjective characteristics of the neighborhood as important to older persons’ wellbeing. •Perceived neighborhood characteristics are associated with wellbeing.•Perceived neighborhood characteristics are associated with loneliness, perceived discrimination and subjective health.•Subjective indicators serve as partial mediators of the association between perceived neighborhood characteristics and wellbeing.•Objective indicators do not account for the relationship between perceived neighborhood characteristics and wellbeing.•The study highlights the distinction between objective and subjective indicators.
ISSN:0272-4944
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102020