Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology, School of Life Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK.
Gerontology. 2013;59(5):454-63. doi: 10.1159/000351265. Epub 2013 May 24.
Social networks and support have been proposed as cognitively protective in old age. As studies often consider these social factors in isolation the question of which characteristics of the social environment are beneficial remains.
The current study examined associations between measures of social networks (including contact with friends/family, marital status and living arrangement), feelings of loneliness and social support, and a range of cognitive outcomes.
Social network, loneliness and support data were available in the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 (LBC1936, n = 1,091) at age 70. Participants completed a battery of cognitive tests, and factor scores were available for general cognitive ability, and the cognitive domains of processing speed and memory. Childhood cognitive ability data from age 11 were also available.
When examined in separate ANCOVAs, lower loneliness and more social support were significantly associated with better cognitive abilities at age 70, though not memory (independently of age, sex, childhood cognitive ability and social class), accounting for about 0.5-1.5% of the variance. When the social factors were considered simultaneously, higher loneliness remained associated with lower general cognitive ability (ηp(2) = 0.005, p = 0.046), and those living alone (ηp(2) = 0.007, p = 0.014) or with less social support (ηp(2) = 0.007, p = 0.016) had slower processing speed. When these final models were repeated including a depression symptoms score as a covariate, the associations between loneliness and general cognitive ability, and social support and processing speed, were no longer significant. However, the association between living alone and processing speed remained (ηp(2) = 0.006, p = 0.031).
Of the social factors considered, loneliness, social support and living arrangement were most consistently associated with aspects of cognitive ability in older people, and these associations appeared to be partly, though not wholly, accounted for by symptoms of depression. Although longitudinal follow-up is required to examine the causal direction of the effects more definitively, it may be beneficial to promote the development of interventions to reduce loneliness and social isolation, and to increase social support.
社交网络和支持被认为对老年人的认知具有保护作用。由于研究通常将这些社会因素孤立地考虑,因此仍存在哪些社会环境特征是有益的问题。
本研究考察了社交网络(包括与朋友/家人的联系、婚姻状况和居住安排)、孤独感和社会支持与一系列认知结果之间的关联。
洛锡安出生队列 1936 年(LBC1936,n=1091)在 70 岁时提供了社交网络、孤独感和支持数据。参与者完成了一系列认知测试,并且可以获得一般认知能力以及认知领域的加工速度和记忆的因子分数。还可以获得 11 岁时的儿童期认知能力数据。
在单独的 ANCOVA 中,较低的孤独感和更多的社会支持与 70 岁时更好的认知能力显著相关,但与记忆无关(独立于年龄、性别、儿童认知能力和社会阶层),占方差的 0.5-1.5%。当同时考虑这些社会因素时,较高的孤独感仍然与较低的一般认知能力相关(ηp(2)=0.005,p=0.046),独居者(ηp(2)=0.007,p=0.014)或社会支持较少者(ηp(2)=0.007,p=0.016)的加工速度较慢。当将抑郁症状评分作为协变量重复这些最终模型时,孤独感与一般认知能力之间的关联以及社会支持与加工速度之间的关联不再显著。然而,独居与加工速度之间的关联仍然存在(ηp(2)=0.006,p=0.031)。
在所考虑的社会因素中,孤独感、社会支持和居住安排与老年人认知能力的各个方面最密切相关,这些关联部分但并非完全由抑郁症状解释。虽然需要进行纵向随访以更明确地检验这些影响的因果方向,但促进减少孤独感和社会隔离以及增加社会支持的干预措施的发展可能是有益的。