Offspring Education and Parents' Cognitive Health: Nativity Differences among Older Hispanic Adults.

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 GERONTOLOGY
Jenjira Yahirun, Jaycob Applegate, Krysia Mossakowski, Mark D Hayward
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Studies that examine the correlates of cognitive health among U.S. Hispanic older adults have not sufficiently explored the role of offspring resources. Given recent evidence of the importance of offspring education for older parents' cognitive health, this study assesses whether the relationship between offspring education and Hispanic parents' cognitive trajectories varies by nativity status.

Research design and methods: Data come from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study (2000-2018). Multi-level models are used to evaluate the relationship between adult children's college education and parents' cognitive trajectories for Hispanic parents over age 50. We also determine whether the link between offspring schooling and parents' cognitive trajectories differs in magnitude for foreign- versus native-born parents.

Results: The results show that offspring college completion is associated with Hispanic parents' initial cognitive scores, but not parents' cognitive score trajectories. Moreover, the cognitive health of native-born parents is more sensitive to children's college completion than foreign-born parents. These results are robust to controls for certain explanatory pathways, including offspring social support to parents, parents' depressive symptoms, and parents' health behaviors.

Discussion and implications: Children's educational resources remain a hidden source of health disparities among older parents. Although our findings confirm this general relationship for older Hispanic adults' cognitive health, significant diversity within the Hispanic community also suggests that children's resources may play different roles for native- versus foreign-born parents. Future research is needed to clarify how nativity status and ethnicity jointly shape the relationship between family members' resources and older adult cognitive health.

后代教育与父母认知健康:西班牙裔老年人的出生差异。
背景和目的:研究美国西班牙裔老年人认知健康相关因素的研究尚未充分探讨后代资源的作用。鉴于最近的证据表明后代教育对老年父母认知健康的重要性,本研究评估了后代教育与西班牙裔父母认知轨迹之间的关系是否因出生状况而异。研究设计和方法:数据来自美国健康与退休研究(2000-2018)。本研究采用多层级模型评估50岁以上西班牙裔父母成年子女大学教育与父母认知轨迹的关系。我们还确定了在外国和本土出生的父母中,子女学校教育和父母认知轨迹之间的联系是否在程度上有所不同。结果:后代大学毕业程度与西班牙裔父母的初始认知得分有关,但与父母的认知得分轨迹无关。此外,与外国出生的父母相比,本土出生的父母的认知健康对子女的大学毕业情况更为敏感。这些结果对于某些解释途径的控制是稳健的,包括后代对父母的社会支持,父母的抑郁症状和父母的健康行为。讨论和影响:儿童的教育资源仍然是老年父母之间健康差异的一个隐藏来源。虽然我们的研究结果证实了西班牙裔老年人认知健康的一般关系,但西班牙裔社区内的显著多样性也表明,儿童资源可能对本地和外国出生的父母起着不同的作用。未来的研究需要澄清出生身份和种族如何共同塑造家庭成员资源与老年人认知健康之间的关系。
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来源期刊
Gerontologist
Gerontologist GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
11.00
自引率
8.80%
发文量
171
期刊介绍: The Gerontologist, published since 1961, is a bimonthly journal of The Gerontological Society of America that provides a multidisciplinary perspective on human aging by publishing research and analysis on applied social issues. It informs the broad community of disciplines and professions involved in understanding the aging process and providing care to older people. Articles should include a conceptual framework and testable hypotheses. Implications for policy or practice should be highlighted. The Gerontologist publishes quantitative and qualitative research and encourages manuscript submissions of various types including: research articles, intervention research, review articles, measurement articles, forums, and brief reports. Book and media reviews, International Spotlights, and award-winning lectures are commissioned by the editors.
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