13 research outputs found
Research on the health status and influencing factors of the older adult floating population in Shanghai
IntroductionOver the past decade, against the dual background of population aging and mobility, the older adult/adults floating population has become a new type of mobile group in China, continually congregating in large cities, posing significant challenges to the socio-economic development, eldercare services, and public management of these metropolises. Shanghai, as a mega-city and the economic center of the China, is typically representative of the national population.MethodsBased on the dynamic monitoring data of Shanghaiâs floating population in 2018, this research uses mathematical statistics and binary Logistic regression models.ObjectiveThis research analyzes the demographic characteristics and health status of the older adult/adults floating population in Shanghai in the new era and reveals its primary influencing factors.Results and discussion(1) A prominent contradiction in the scale and structure of the older adult/adults floating population, with widowed and low-educated mobile older adult/adults requiring attention. (2) There is a lack of health knowledge, and the proportion of local reimbursement is low. Over 90% of migrant older adult/adults self-assessed their health (with a very few unable to care for themselves), far higher than the proportion of older adult/adults who are not sick (injured) or uncomfortable (actually healthy), which exceeds 70%. The health status of migrant older adult/adults deteriorates with age, and those who have never attended school and live alone have the worst health status. (3) Older adult/adults people with advanced age and low educational levels are at risk of health issues, while a better living environment can reduce the risk of illness in the older adult/adults floating population. Low family income, poor housing affordability, and the medical burden brought about by illness can easily lead to older adult/adults floating populations falling into the trap of older adult/adults poverty, and older adult/adults people from central regions and those who migrate along have difficulty adapting to city life, leading to poor self-assessed health. Meanwhile, community/enterprise health education helps to enhance the health protection awareness of the older adult/adults floating population. Finally, based on the governance concept of âmobility publicness,â several public management and service optimization strategies for social support for the older adult/adults floating population in Shanghai are proposed
The spatiality and driving forces of population ageing in China.
Studying the spatial characteristics of China's ageing and its influencing factors is of great practical significance because China has the largest elderly population in the world. Using 2000 and 2010 census data, this study explores the degree, pace, and pattern of population ageing and its driving mechanism using exploratory spatial data analysis and the geographically weighed regression model. Between 2000 and 2010, population ageing increased rapidly countrywide; yet, spatial differences between eastern and western China narrowed. The degree of provincial population ageing and its spatiality were determined by natural population growth, migration, and local economic development. Life expectancy and mortality were the primary long-term factors, and GDP per capita was the prime contributor in the early days of economic development; the migration rate was the dominant influence after 2010. China's overall spatial differentiation of population ageing shifted from a north-south to an east-west division
Guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefits with high-water mark fee structure.
The Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefit (GMWB), an adjunct incorporated within variable annuities, commits to reimbursing the entire initial investment regardless of the performance of the underlying funds. While extensive research exists in financial and actuarial literature regarding the modeling and valuation techniques of GMWBs, much of it is founded on a static fee structure. Our study introduces an innovative fee structure based on the high-water mark (HWM) principle and a regime-switch jump-diffusion model for the pricing of GMWBs, employing numerical solutions through the Monte Carlo method for solving the stochastic differential equation (SDE). Furthermore, a companion piece of research addresses the risk management of GMWBs within the same analytical framework as the pricing component, an aspect that has received limited attention in the existing literature. In assessing the necessary capital reserves for unforeseen losses, our methodology involves the computation of two risk metrics associated with the tail distribution of net liability from the insurer's perspective, Value-at-Risk (VaR) and Conditional-Tail-Expectation (CTE). Comprehensive numerical results and sensitivity analyses are also provided
Spatial coupling relationship between older adults and elderly care resources in the Yangtze River Delta.
The imbalance between supply and demand of elderly care resources in the Yangtze River Delta is increasing. By the older adult agglomeration, spatial cluster analysis, hotspot analysis, and coupling coordination model, this study explores the spatial coupling relationship between older adults and elderly care resources in the Yangtze River Delta in 2020 from the perspective of a supply-and-demand balance. The results demonstrate that: (1) population aging is mainly in the moderate aging stage, followed by the primary aging stage; (2) there are significant spatial differences in elderly care resources on the urban scale in the Yangtze River Delta; and (3) elderly care resources and the older adults in the Yangtze River Delta are mostly highly coupled. However, Nantong, with the highest degree of aging, has a serious mismatch in life service resources and ecological environment resources. The social security resources and medical resources of provincial capital cities with low aging are mismatched. Medical and health resources in underdeveloped areas are seriously mismatched. The social security resources are barely matched in Shanghai. A path for optimizing the spatial allocation of elderly care resources is proposed. This research offers a decision-making reference for coordinating elderly care resources distribution
Transcriptional Regulation of Human UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase 2B10 by Farnesoid X Receptor in Human Hepatoma HepG2 Cells
Little
is known about transcriptional regulators of UDP-glucuronosyltransferase
2B10 (UGT2B10), an enzyme known to glucuronidate many chemicals and
drugs such as nicotine and tricyclic antidepressants. Here, we uncovered
that UGT2B10 was transcriptionally regulated by farnesoid X receptor
(FXR), the bile acid sensing nuclear receptor. GW4064 and chenodeoxycholic
acid (two specific FXR agonists) treatment of HepG2 cells led to a
significant increase in the mRNA level of UGT2B10. The treated cells
also showed enhanced glucuronidation activities toward amitriptyline
(an UGT2B10 probe substrate). In reporter gene assays, the extent
of UGT2B10 activation by the FXR agonists was positively correlated
with the amount of cotransfected FXR. Consistently, knockdown of FXR
by shRNA attenuated the induction effect on UGT2B10 expression. Furthermore,
a combination of electrophoretic mobility shift assay and chromatin
immunoprecipitation showed that the FXR receptor trans-activated UGT2B10
through its specific binding to the â209- to â197-bp
region (an IR1 element) of the UGT2B10 promoter. In summary, our results
for the first time established FXR as a transcriptional regulator
of human UGT2B10