认知衰老的社会心理保护因素:一项有针对性的综述。

IF 2.1
Laura B Zahodne
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引用次数: 5

摘要

目的:痴呆症疾病修饰药物的缺乏凸显了预防的重要性,但已知的可修饰因素(如教育、身体健康和健康行为、抑郁和社会孤立)并不能完全代表潜在的干预目标。积极的社会心理因素比已知的风险因素更能预测认知衰老的结果,也可能对应于为预防和干预以及减少痴呆症中的种族/民族不平等开辟新途径的上游决定因素。在这篇简短的报告中,我总结了三个积极的社会心理因素的当代证据,这些因素似乎与认知衰老特别相关:感知控制、宗教参与和社会关系。方法:有针对性地回顾和综合已发表的研究。结果:每个多维结构似乎都包含“有效成分”,可以通过不同的机制帮助优化认知衰老。虽然历史上被边缘化的种族/族裔群体在获得某些社会心理保护因素(例如,感知控制)方面面临着不成比例的障碍,但这些群体也表现出自然产生的社会心理复原力(例如,宗教参与),使他们能够实现比预期更好的晚年认知健康。在社会关系方面,来自不同研究的越来越多的证据表明,特别是培养晚年友谊可能具有建立认知储备和促进健康认知衰老的巨大潜力。结论:积极的社会心理因素代表着与文化相关的资源,通过仔细的研究,最终可以利用这些资源来促进不断增长和日益多样化的老年人更好的认知老龄化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Psychosocial Protective Factors in Cognitive Aging: A Targeted Review.

Objective: The lack of disease-modifying pharmacological agents for dementia highlights the critical importance of prevention, but known modifiable factors (e.g., education, physical health and health behaviors, depression, and social isolation) do not fully represent potential intervention targets. Positive psychosocial factors predict cognitive aging outcomes above and beyond known risk factors and may also correspond to upstream determinants that open up new avenues for prevention and intervention, as well as for reducing racial/ethnic inequalities in dementia. In this brief report, I summarize contemporary evidence for three positive psychosocial factors that appear to be particularly relevant to cognitive aging: perceived control, religious involvement, and social relations.

Methods: Targeted review and synthesis of published studies.

Results: Each of the multidimensional constructs appears to contain "active ingredients" that could help to optimize cognitive aging through disparate mechanisms. Although historically marginalized racial/ethnic groups face disproportionate barriers to accessing certain psychosocial protective factors (e.g., perceived control), these same groups also exhibit naturally occurring sources of psychosocial resilience (e.g., religious involvement) that allow them to achieve better late-life cognitive health than would be otherwise expected. With regard to social relations, converging evidence from disparate studies shows that fostering late-life friendships in particular may have high potential for building cognitive reserve and promoting healthy cognitive aging.

Conclusions: Positive psychosocial factors represent culturally relevant resources that, through careful research, could ultimately be harnessed to promote better cognitive aging for a growing and increasingly diverse population of older adults.

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