Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington, Bloomington, IN 47405.
South African Medical Research Council/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt), School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2193, South Africa.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Oct;121(40):e2321078121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2321078121. Epub 2024 Sep 19.
Evidence on cash transfers as a population-level intervention to support healthy cognitive aging in low-income settings is sparse. We assessed the effect of a cash transfer intervention on cognitive aging outcomes in older South African adults. We leveraged the overlap in the sampling frames of a Phase 3 randomized cash transfer trial [HIV Prevention Trial Network (HPTN) 068, 2011-2015] and an aging cohort [Health and Aging in Africa: A Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH Community (HAALSI), 2014-2022] in rural Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. In 2011/12, young women and their primary caregivers were randomly assigned 1:1 to receive a monthly cash transfer or control. In 2014/2015, 862 adults aged 40+ y living in trial households were enrolled in the HAALSI cohort, with cognitive data collected in three waves over 7 y. We estimated the impact of the intervention on rate of memory decline and dementia probability scores. Memory decline in the cash transfer arm was 0.03 SD units (95% CI: 0.002, 0.05) slower per year than in the control arm. Dementia probability scores were three percentage points lower in the cash transfer arm than the control arm (β = -0.03; 95% CI: -0.05, -0.001). Effects were consistent across subgroups. A modestly sized household cash transfer delivered over a short period in mid- to later-life led to a meaningful slowing of memory decline and reduction in dementia probability 7 y later. Cash transfer programs could help stem the tide of new dementia cases in economically vulnerable populations in the coming decades.
在低收入环境中,将现金转移作为支持健康认知衰老的人群干预措施的证据很少。我们评估了现金转移干预对南非老年人认知衰老结果的影响。我们利用了一项 3 期随机现金转移试验(HIV 预防试验网络[HPTN]068,2011-2015 年)和一个老龄化队列(非洲健康与老龄化:一个深入社区的纵向研究[HAALSI],2014-2022 年)的抽样框架重叠,该研究在南非姆普马兰加省农村地区进行。2011/12 年,年轻女性及其主要照顾者被随机分配 1:1 接受每月现金转移或对照。2014/2015 年,居住在试验家庭中的 862 名 40 岁以上成年人被纳入 HAALSI 队列,在 7 年内进行了 3 次认知数据收集。我们估计了干预对记忆衰退率和痴呆概率评分的影响。与对照组相比,现金转移组的记忆衰退速度每年慢 0.03 个标准差单位(95%CI:0.002,0.05)。现金转移组的痴呆概率评分比对照组低 3 个百分点(β=-0.03;95%CI:-0.05,-0.001)。这些影响在各亚组中是一致的。在中年后期的一生中,短时间内发放一笔适度规模的家庭现金转移金,可在 7 年后显著减缓记忆衰退速度,降低痴呆概率。现金转移计划可以帮助遏制未来几十年中经济脆弱人群中新的痴呆病例的增长。