Liu Sze Yan, Glymour M Maria, Zahodne Laura B, Weiss Christopher, Manly Jennifer J
1Center for Population and Development Studies,Harvard University School of Public Health,Cambridge,Massachusetts.
2Human Development, and Health,Harvard School of Public Health,Boston,Massachusetts and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics,University of California,San Francisco,California.
J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2015 Oct;21(9):677-87. doi: 10.1017/S1355617715000806. Epub 2015 Sep 28.
Racially patterned disadvantage in Southern states, especially during the formative years of primary school, may contribute to enduring disparities in adult cognitive outcomes. Drawing on a lifecourse perspective, we examine whether state of school attendance affects cognitive outcomes in older adults and partially contributes to persistent racial disparities. Using data from older African American and white participants in the national Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and the New York based Washington Heights Inwood Cognitive Aging Project (WHICAP), we estimated age-and gender-adjusted multilevel models with random effects for states predicting years of education and cognitive outcomes (e.g., memory and vocabulary). We summarized the proportion of variation in outcomes attributable to state of school attendance and compared the magnitude of racial disparities across states. Among WHICAP African Americans, state of school attendance accounted for 9% of the variance in years of schooling, 6% of memory, and 12% of language. Among HRS African Americans, state of school attendance accounted for 13% of the variance in years of schooling and also contributed to variance in cognitive function (7%), memory (2%), and vocabulary (12%). Random slope models indicated state-level African American and white disparities in every Census region, with the largest racial differences in the South. State of school attendance may contribute to racial disparities in cognitive outcomes among older Americans. Despite tremendous within-state heterogeneity, state of school attendance also accounted for some variability in cognitive outcomes. Racial disparities in older Americans may reflect historical patterns of segregation and differential access to resources such as education.
美国南部各州存在的种族模式劣势,尤其是在小学成长阶段,可能导致成年人认知结果方面长期存在差异。从生命历程的角度出发,我们研究了上学的州是否会影响老年人的认知结果,并在一定程度上导致持续存在的种族差异。利用来自全国健康与退休研究(HRS)中年龄较大的非裔美国人和白人参与者以及纽约华盛顿高地因伍德认知衰老项目(WHICAP)的数据,我们估计了按年龄和性别调整的多层模型,该模型对预测受教育年限和认知结果(如记忆力和词汇量)的州具有随机效应。我们总结了可归因于上学州的结果差异比例,并比较了各州种族差异的程度。在WHICAP的非裔美国人中,上学的州占受教育年限差异的9%、记忆力差异的6%和语言差异的12%。在HRS的非裔美国人中,上学的州占受教育年限差异的13%,也导致了认知功能差异(7%)、记忆力差异(2%)和词汇量差异(12%)。随机斜率模型表明,在每个普查区域,州一级的非裔美国人和白人之间都存在差异,其中南方的种族差异最大。上学的州可能导致美国老年人在认知结果上的种族差异。尽管州内存在巨大的异质性,但上学的州也在一定程度上导致了认知结果的差异。美国老年人中的种族差异可能反映了历史上的隔离模式以及获得教育等资源的差异。