Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, US.
Division of Behavior and Policy Sciences, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, US.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 3;23(1):636. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15381-9.
Black Americans have disproportionately higher rates and earlier onset of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) relative to White Americans. We currently lack a comprehensive understanding of how the lived experience and broader societal factors, including cumulative exposure to structural racism and the mechanisms underlying the risks, may contribute to elevated ADRD risk in Black Americans.
The Think PHRESH study builds on existing, community-based research infrastructure, from the ongoing Pittsburgh Hill/Homewood Research on Neighborhood Change and Health (PHRESH) studies, to examine the contributions of dynamic neighborhood socioeconomic conditions across the lifecourse to cognitive outcomes in mid- and late-life adults living in two historically disinvested, predominantly Black communities (anticipated n = 1133). This longitudinal, mixed-methods study rests on the premise that neighborhood racial segregation and subsequent disinvestment contributes to poor cognitive outcomes via factors including (a) low access to educational opportunities and (b) high exposure to race- and socioeconomically-relevant stressors, such as discrimination, trauma, and adverse childhood events. In turn, these cumulative exposures foster psychological vigilance in residents, leading to cardiometabolic dysregulation and sleep disruption, which may mediate associations between neighborhood disadvantage and ADRD risk. This premise recognizes the importance of potential protective factors that may promote cognitive health, including neighborhood social cohesion, safety, and satisfaction. The proposed study will leverage our existing longitudinal data on risk/protective factors and biobehavioral mediators and will include: (1) up to three waves of cognitive assessments in participants ages 50 years + and one assessment in participants ages 35-49 years; clinical adjudication of ADRD will be completed in participants who are 50+, (2) extensive surveys of risk and protective factors, (3) two assessments of blood pressure and objectively measured sleep, (4) a comprehensive assessment of life and residential history; and (5) two rounds of in-depth qualitative interviews to reveal lifecourse opportunities and barriers experienced by Black Americans in achieving optimal cognitive health in late life.
Understanding how structural racism has influenced the lived experience of Black Americans, including dynamic changes in neighborhood conditions over time, is critical to inform multi-level intervention and policy efforts to reduce pervasive racial and socioeconomic disparities in ADRD.
与美国白人相比,非裔美国人的阿尔茨海默病和相关痴呆症(ADRD)发病率更高,发病年龄更早。我们目前还不完全了解,生活经历和更广泛的社会因素(包括长期遭受结构性种族主义和导致风险的潜在机制)如何导致非裔美国人的 ADRD 风险升高。
Think PHRESH 研究建立在现有的社区为基础的研究基础设施之上,该研究来自正在进行的匹兹堡山/霍姆伍德邻里变化与健康研究(PHRESH),以检查整个生命周期中动态邻里社会经济状况对生活在两个历史上投资不足、以黑人为主要居民的社区(预计 n=1133 名)的中老年成年人认知结果的贡献。这项纵向混合方法研究的前提是,邻里种族隔离和随后的投资不足通过以下因素导致认知结果不佳:(a)获得教育机会的机会减少,以及(b)接触与种族和社会经济相关的压力源(如歧视、创伤和不良的儿童经历)的机会增加。反过来,这些累积的暴露会导致居民心理警觉,导致代谢紊乱和睡眠中断,这可能会调解邻里劣势与 ADRD 风险之间的关联。这一前提认识到潜在保护因素的重要性,这些因素可能促进认知健康,包括邻里社会凝聚力、安全性和满意度。拟议的研究将利用我们现有的关于风险/保护因素和生物行为中介的纵向数据,并包括:(1)50 岁及以上参与者的最多三个认知评估波次和一个 35-49 岁参与者的评估,在 50 岁及以上的参与者中完成 ADRD 的临床判断,(2)对风险和保护因素的广泛调查,(3)两次血压和客观测量的睡眠评估,(4)全面的生活和居住史评估,以及(5)两轮深入的定性访谈,以揭示非裔美国人在晚年实现最佳认知健康的生活经历中的机会和障碍。
了解结构性种族主义如何影响非裔美国人的生活经历,包括随时间变化的邻里条件的动态变化,对于为减少 ADRD 中普遍存在的种族和社会经济差异提供多层次的干预和政策努力至关重要。