Comprehensive Center for Brain Health, Department of Neurology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
Department of Mathematical Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2021;84(4):1563-1576. doi: 10.3233/JAD-215020.
Socioeconomic status (SES), race, ethnicity, and medical comorbidities may contribute to Alzheimer's disease and related disorders (ADRD) health disparities.
Analyze effects of social and medical determinants on cognition in 374 multicultural older adults participating in a community-based dementia screening program.
We used the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and AD8 as measures of cognition, and a 3-way race/ethnicity variable (White, African American, Hispanic) and SES (Hollingshead index) as predictors. Potential contributors to health disparities included: age, sex, education, total medical comorbidities, health self-ratings, and depression. We applied K-means cluster analyses to study medical and social dimension effects on cognitive outcomes.
African Americans and Hispanics had lower SES status and cognitive performance compared with similarly aged Whites. We defined three clusters based on age and SES. Cluster #1 and #3 differed by SES but not age, while cluster #2 was younger with midlevel SES. Cluster #1 experienced the worse health outcomes while cluster #3 had the best health outcomes. Within each cluster, White participants had higher SES and better health outcomes, African Americans had the worst physical performance, and Hispanics had the most depressive symptoms. In cross-cluster comparisons, higher SES led to better health outcomes for all participants.
SES may contribute to disparities in access to healthcare services, while race and ethnicity may contribute to disparities in the quality and extent of services received. Our study highlights the need to critically address potential interactions between race, ethnicity, and SES which may better explain disparities in ADRD health outcomes.
社会经济地位(SES)、种族、民族和医疗合并症可能导致阿尔茨海默病和相关疾病(ADRD)的健康差异。
分析社会和医疗决定因素对参与基于社区的痴呆症筛查计划的 374 名多元文化老年人认知的影响。
我们使用蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)和 AD8 作为认知测量指标,使用 3 路种族/民族变量(白种人、非裔美国人、西班牙裔)和 SES(霍林斯黑德指数)作为预测指标。导致健康差异的潜在因素包括:年龄、性别、教育程度、总医疗合并症、健康自评和抑郁。我们应用 K 均值聚类分析研究医疗和社会维度对认知结果的影响。
非裔美国人和西班牙裔的 SES 状况和认知表现均低于同龄白人。我们根据年龄和 SES 定义了三个聚类。聚类 #1 和 #3 在 SES 上有所不同,但年龄不同,而聚类 #2 则年龄较小,SES 中等。聚类 #1 经历了更糟糕的健康结果,而聚类 #3 则有最好的健康结果。在每个聚类中,白人参与者 SES 较高,健康结果较好,非裔美国人的身体表现最差,西班牙裔的抑郁症状最多。在跨聚类比较中,较高的 SES 导致所有参与者的健康结果更好。
SES 可能导致获得医疗保健服务的差异,而种族和民族可能导致获得服务的质量和程度的差异。我们的研究强调需要认真解决种族、民族和 SES 之间可能更好地解释 ADRD 健康结果差异的潜在相互作用。