General Internal Medicine & Health Services Research, University of California Los Angeles, CA.
Ethn Dis. 2019 Jul 18;29(3):525-534. doi: 10.18865/ed.29.3.525. eCollection 2019 Summer.
Little data exist to describe serial population-level trends in cognitive impairment- especially among minority communities. Because memory problems are among the first warning signs of cognitive impairment, they provide a potential method for monitoring changes in cognitive health at the population level. This exploratory study aimed to: 1) estimate prevalence of memory problems among US residents by race/ethnicity, age category; and 2) examine whether racial/ethnic differences in subjective cognitive concerns (memory problems) varied across recent time periods.
Serial cross-sectional analysis of self-reported data from the National Health and Examination Survey (NHANES), 1999-2014.
20,585 participants aged ≥45 years during 1999-2014, who reported race/ethnicity as non-Hispanic White (NHW), non-Hispanic Black (NHB), and Latino/Hispanic.
The outcome of interest was subjective cognitive concerns, identified as self-reported memory problems. The frequencies of memory problems were examined for each 4-year period, across racial/ethnic groups.
In adjusted analyses, compared with older (aged ≥ 65 years) NHWs, disparities in subjective cognitive concerns were observed for older Latinos for most periods (range of AOR: 1.43 - 2.01, P<.05). Additionally, Latinos without a high school education had significantly higher odds of reporting memory problems than NHW in multiple periods (range of AOR: 1.95 - 2.17, P<.005), while Latino high school graduates did not. There were no significant changes in racial/ethnic differences in subjective cognitive concerns over time.
The prevalence of subjective cognitive concerns across time periods points to a need to engage patients - particularly older and less-educated Latinos - about warning signs for cognitive impairment. The impact of education on subjective cognitive concerns in older Latinos may be related to acculturation and warrant further investigation.
关于认知障碍的连续人群水平趋势,特别是在少数族裔社区,相关数据很少。由于记忆问题是认知障碍的最初预警信号之一,因此它们为监测人群认知健康的变化提供了一种潜在方法。本探索性研究旨在:1)按种族/族裔和年龄类别估计美国居民记忆问题的患病率;2)检验主观认知问题(记忆问题)的种族/族裔差异是否随近期时间变化而变化。
对 1999-2014 年全国健康和体检调查(NHANES)的自我报告数据进行连续的横断面分析。
20585 名在 1999-2014 年期间年龄≥45 岁的参与者,报告种族/族裔为非西班牙裔白人(NHW)、非西班牙裔黑人(NHB)和拉丁裔/西班牙裔。
感兴趣的结果是主观认知问题,即自我报告的记忆问题。检查了不同种族/族裔群体中每 4 年的记忆问题发生频率。
在调整后的分析中,与年龄较大(≥65 岁)的 NHW 相比,在大多数时期(比值比范围:1.43-2.01,P<.05),年龄较大的拉丁裔人群的主观认知问题存在差异。此外,在多个时期,没有高中文凭的拉丁裔报告记忆问题的可能性明显高于 NHW(比值比范围:1.95-2.17,P<.005),而拉丁裔高中毕业生则没有。主观认知问题的种族/族裔差异随时间没有明显变化。
随着时间的推移,主观认知问题的流行表明需要让患者——特别是年龄较大和受教育程度较低的拉丁裔——了解认知障碍的预警信号。教育对老年拉丁裔主观认知问题的影响可能与文化适应有关,值得进一步研究。