School of Public Health, The University of Hong Kong, 7 Sassoon Road, Pokfulam, Hong Kong.
Department of International and Community Oral Health, Tohoku University Graduate School of Dentistry, 4-1 Seiryo-machi, Aoba, Sendai, Miyagi, 980-0872, Japan.
Soc Sci Med. 2020 Jul;257:111981. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.09.057. Epub 2018 Sep 28.
We examined prospectively whether community-level social capital can mitigate the adverse effects of natural disaster on cognitive decline in the aftermath of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami. The baseline for our natural experimental study was established seven months before the disaster in a survey of older community-dwelling adults who lived in Iwanuma City, Japan, located 80 km west of the epicenter. Two and a half years after the disaster, we conducted a follow-up survey of survivors to gather information about their personal experiences during the disaster (n = 3560; 82.1% follow-up rate). Our primary outcome was the level of cognitive disability (measured on an 8-level scale) assessed within people's homes. Factor analysis established two subscales of community social capital: a cognitive dimension (perceptions of community social cohesion) and a structural dimension (informal socializing and social participation). The prevalence of cognitive decline at follow-up (11.5%) was three times higher than at baseline (4.2%). Our multiple membership multilevel model indicated that pre-versus post-disaster increases in community-level informal socializing and social participation were associated with lower risk of cognitive decline (coefficient = -0.12, 95% confidence interval: -0.20 to -0.04). In addition, social capital mitigated the risk of cognitive decline due to housing damage (interaction effect coefficient = -0.07, 95% confidence interval: -0.14 to -0.01). Community-level informal socializing and social participation buffers the impact of housing damage on cognitive decline in the aftermath of natural disaster. Relocating residents together with other community members may help to preserve community social capital and improve the cognitive resilience of older survivors.
我们前瞻性地研究了社区层面的社会资本是否可以减轻 2011 年日本东海岸大地震和海啸对认知能力下降的负面影响。我们的自然实验研究的基线是在灾难前七个月建立的,当时对日本岩沼市的老年社区居民进行了一项调查,该市位于震中以西 80 公里处。灾难发生两年半后,我们对幸存者进行了随访调查,以收集他们在灾难期间的个人经历信息(n=3560;82.1%的随访率)。我们的主要结果是在居民家中评估的认知障碍水平(用 8 级量表衡量)。因子分析确立了社区社会资本的两个子维度:认知维度(社区社会凝聚力的感知)和结构维度(非正式社交和社会参与)。随访时认知下降的患病率(11.5%)是基线时(4.2%)的三倍。我们的多成员多层次模型表明,社区层面的非正式社交和社会参与在灾难前后的增加与认知下降的风险降低有关(系数=-0.12,95%置信区间:-0.20 至-0.04)。此外,社会资本减轻了住房损失对认知下降的风险(交互效应系数=-0.07,95%置信区间:-0.14 至-0.01)。社区层面的非正式社交和社会参与缓冲了自然灾害后住房损失对认知下降的影响。将居民与其他社区成员一起重新安置可能有助于保护社区社会资本并提高老年幸存者的认知弹性。