Byrd DeAnnah R, Gonzales Ernest, Moody Danielle L Beatty, Marshall Gillian L, Zahodne Laura B, Thorpe Roland J, Whitfield Keith E
Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, USA.
New York University, Silver School of Social Work, New York, NY, USA.
Res Hum Dev. 2020;17(1):41-56. doi: 10.1080/15427609.2020.1746159. Epub 2020 Jul 1.
Previous research links chronic health conditions and financial hardship to cognitive outcomes among older Blacks. However, few studies have explored the moderating effect of financial hardship on chronic disease burden and specific cognitive domains. This study examined whether financial hardship (as measured by difficulty paying monthly bills) modifies the impact of self-reported chronic health conditions (e.g., diabetes, stroke) on episodic memory among 871 older Blacks (50+ years) in the Health and Retirement Study (2006). Financial hardship modified the association between chronic disease burden and episodic memory performance such that individuals who reported very little difficulty paying their monthly bills had significantly lower memory scores at high levels of disease burden compared to those reporting high financial difficulty after controlling for age, gender and education (F 2, 49 = 5.03, p= 0.010). This cross-sectional study suggests that both financial and physical wellbeing may have joint effects on cognitive health in older Blacks.
先前的研究将慢性健康状况和经济困难与老年黑人的认知结果联系起来。然而,很少有研究探讨经济困难对慢性病负担和特定认知领域的调节作用。本研究在《健康与退休研究》(2006年)中,调查了经济困难(以每月支付账单的难度衡量)是否会改变自我报告的慢性健康状况(如糖尿病、中风)对871名50岁及以上老年黑人情景记忆的影响。经济困难改变了慢性病负担与情景记忆表现之间的关联,即在控制了年龄、性别和教育程度后,报告每月支付账单困难很小的个体在高疾病负担水平下的记忆得分显著低于报告高经济困难的个体(F(2, 49) = 5.03,p = 0.010)。这项横断面研究表明,经济和身体健康状况可能对老年黑人的认知健康产生共同影响。