FC9: Ethno-racial identity and cognitive impairment: A population-based study

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Mary Ganguli, Yingjin Zhang, Erin Jacobsen, Isabella Wood, Chung-Chou Chang
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective:Health disparities between communities with greater and lesser advantages are a global concern. In the USA, self-identified race as African American (AA) is consistently associated with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia, compared to Americans of European descent. In a prospective population-based study, we sought to confirm this association and investigate potential explanatory factors.Methods:The Monongahela-Youghiogheny Healthy Aging Team (MYHAT) and Seniors Project 15104 (SP15104) studies recruited adults aged 65+ years from a group of small towns of lower socioeconomic status in the US. MYHAT recruited by age-stratified random sampling from the voter registration list for all towns; SP15104 recruited by intensive community engagement from three towns with populations that are 60% AA. Based on the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR), MCI was defined as CDR=0.5 and dementia as CDR > 1. Using Cox proportional hazard models, we modeled time to incident CDR > 0.5 from baseline as a function of race (AA vs. all other), other demographics, and several other covariates at baseline.Results:The sample of 2120 individuals was 8% AA, and 62% female, with median age of 73y, and median educational level of partial college. During follow up of up to 14.5 years, 499 participants developed new-onset MCI/dementia (CDR >0.5). Cox models revealed that being AA was significantly associated with incident CDR > 0.5 (HR=1.45. 95% CI:1.01,2.10). Inclusion of age, sex, and education in the model increased the HR for race to 1.63 (1.1, 2.3). Adding number of regularly taken prescription drugs (reflecting overall morbidity), depression symptoms, preceding year alcohol consumption, and number of visits to emergency or urgent care together reduced the HR to 1.4 (0.96, 2.0), no longer statistically significantConclusions:In this population-based cohort study, self-identified African Americans had an about 40% elevated risk of developing MCI/dementia. Adjusting for demographics, the significant association between race and incident MCI/dementia was attenuated by variables reflecting depression, greater general morbidity, and lesser access to regular health services. These variables possibly reflect downstream effects of historic discrimination, but couldstill be modifiable risk factors for MCI/dementia. Addressing them could potentially mitigate ethno-racial disparities in cognitive impairment.
FC9:民族-种族认同与认知障碍:基于人口的研究
目标:优势社区与劣势社区之间的健康差距是一个全球性问题。在美国,与欧洲裔美国人相比,自我认同为非裔美国人(AA)的种族一直与轻度认知障碍(MCI)和痴呆症有关。方法:Monongahela-Youghiogheny Healthy Aging Team(MYHAT)和Seniors Project 15104(SP15104)研究从美国一些社会经济地位较低的小镇招募 65 岁以上的成年人。MYHAT 通过从所有城镇的选民登记名单中进行年龄分层随机抽样的方式进行招募;SP15104 则通过密集的社区参与,从人口中 60% 为 AA 的三个城镇中进行招募。根据临床痴呆评级(CDR),CDR=0.5定义为MCI,CDR> 1定义为痴呆。使用Cox比例危险模型,我们将从基线到发生CDR> 0.5的时间与种族(AA与所有其他)、其他人口统计学特征以及基线时的其他几个协变量进行了建模。结果:2120名样本中有8%为AA,62%为女性,年龄中位数为73岁,教育水平中位数为部分大专。在长达 14.5 年的随访中,499 名参与者出现了新发 MCI/痴呆(CDR 为 0.5)。Cox 模型显示,AA 与发病 CDR > 0.5 显著相关(HR=1.45。95% CI:1.01,2.10)。将年龄、性别和教育程度纳入模型后,种族的 HR 增加到 1.63 (1.1, 2.3)。结论:在这项基于人群的队列研究中,自我认同的非裔美国人罹患 MCI/痴呆症的风险增加了约 40%。在对人口统计学因素进行调整后,种族与 MCI/痴呆症发病之间的显著关联因反映抑郁、更高的一般发病率和较少获得常规医疗服务的变量而减弱。这些变量可能反映了历史歧视的下游效应,但仍可能是导致 MCI/痴呆症的可改变的风险因素。解决这些问题有可能减轻认知障碍方面的民族-种族差异。
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来源期刊
International psychogeriatrics
International psychogeriatrics 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
8.60%
发文量
217
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: A highly respected, multidisciplinary journal, International Psychogeriatrics publishes high quality original research papers in the field of psychogeriatrics. The journal aims to be the leading peer reviewed journal dealing with all aspects of the mental health of older people throughout the world. Circulated to over 1,000 members of the International Psychogeriatric Association, International Psychogeriatrics also features important editorials, provocative debates, literature reviews, book reviews and letters to the editor.
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