Shaw Ashley R, Perales-Puchalt Jaime, Valdivieso-Mora Esmeralda, McGee Jerrihlyn L, Vaduvathiriyan Prasanna, Vidoni Eric D
University of Kansas Alzheimer's Disease Center, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS, USA.
Ethn Health. 2022 May;27(4):929-945. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2020.1828292. Epub 2020 Oct 6.
African Americans and Latinos/Hispanics have a higher prevalence of dementia compared to non-Latino Whites. This scoping review aims to synthesize non-pharmaceutical interventions to delay or slow age-related cognitive decline among cognitively healthy African American and Latino older adults.
A literature search for articles published between January 2000 and May 2019 was performed using the databases PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO and Web of Science. Relevant cited references and grey literature were also reviewed. Four independent reviewers evaluated 1,181 abstracts, and full-article screening was subsequently performed for 145 articles. The scoping review consisted of eight studies, which were evaluated according to the peer-reviewed original manuscript, non-pharmaceutical intervention, cognitive function as an outcome, separate reporting of results for African American and Latinos, minimum age of 40, and conducted in the US. A total of 8 studies were considered eligible and were analyzed in the present scoping review.
Eight studies were identified. Four studies focused on African Americans and four focused on Latinos. Through the analysis, results indicated cognitive training-focused interventions were effective in improving memory, executive function, reasoning, visuospatial, psychological function, and speed among African Americans. Exercise interventions were effective in improving cognition among Latinos.
This scoping review identified effective non-pharmaceutical interventions among African American and Latinos. Effective interventions focused on cognitive training alone for African Americans and exercise combined with group educational sessions for Latinos. Future research should explore developing culturally appropriate non-pharmaceutical interventions to reduce disparities and to enhance cognition among older African American and Latinos.
与非拉丁裔白人相比,非裔美国人和拉丁裔/西班牙裔美国人患痴呆症的患病率更高。本综述旨在综合非药物干预措施,以延缓或减缓认知健康的非裔美国人和拉丁裔老年人与年龄相关的认知衰退。
使用PubMed、CINAHL、PsycINFO和Web of Science数据库对2000年1月至2019年5月发表的文章进行文献检索。还对相关的引用参考文献和灰色文献进行了审查。四名独立评审员评估了1181篇摘要,随后对145篇文章进行了全文筛选。该综述包括八项研究,根据同行评审的原始手稿、非药物干预、作为结果的认知功能、非裔美国人和拉丁裔结果的单独报告、最低年龄40岁以及在美国进行的研究进行评估。共有8项研究被认为符合条件,并在本综述中进行了分析。
确定了八项研究。四项研究关注非裔美国人,四项关注拉丁裔。通过分析,结果表明,以认知训练为重点的干预措施对改善非裔美国人的记忆、执行功能、推理、视觉空间、心理功能和速度有效。运动干预对改善拉丁裔的认知有效。
本综述确定了非裔美国人和拉丁裔中有效的非药物干预措施。有效的干预措施对非裔美国人仅侧重于认知训练,对拉丁裔则是运动与小组教育课程相结合。未来的研究应探索开发适合文化背景的非药物干预措施,以减少差异并提高老年非裔美国人和拉丁裔的认知能力。