Ping Yongjing, Odden Michelle C, Chen Xi, Prina Matthew, Xu Hanzhang, Xiang Hao, Wu Chenkai
Program in Health Services and Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore, Singapore.
Global Health Research Center, Duke Kunshan University, Kunshan, Jiangsu, China.
Innov Aging. 2024 Aug 28;8(10):igae078. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igae078. eCollection 2024.
The racial or ethnic disparity in the burden of dementia exists among older adults in the United States, whereas gaps remain in understanding the synergic effect of multiple social determinants of health on diminishing this disparity. We aim to build a polysocial score for dementia and investigate the racial or ethnic difference in dementia risk among older persons with different polysocial score categories.
In this prospective cohort study, we utilized longitudinal data from the Health and Retirement Study in the United States recruiting 6 945 participants aged ≥65 years who had data on 24 social determinants of health in 2006/2008. The dementia status of participants was measured by a modified version of the Telephone Interview of Cognitive Status. The stepwise Cox regression was applied to select social determinants of health associated with incident dementia to construct a polysocial score. The multivariable Poisson model and linear mixed model were utilized to investigate the associations between polysocial score and incident dementia and cognitive decline, respectively.
Eight social determinants of health were used to build the polysocial score. Non-Hispanic Black older participants had a higher incidence rate (incidence rate difference [IRD] = 22.7; 95% confident interval [95% CI] = 12.7-32.8) than non-Hispanic White older adults in the low polysocial score, while this difference was substantially attenuated in the high polysocial score category (IRD = 0.5; 95% CI = -6.4 to -7.5). The cognitive decline of non-Hispanic older Black adults with high polysocial score was 84.6% slower (averaged cognitive decline: non-Hispanic White: -2.4 [95% CI = -2.5 to -2.3] vs non-Hispanic Black: -1.3 [95% CI = -1.9 to -0.8]) than that of non-Hispanic older White persons.
These findings may help comprehensively understand and address racial and ethnic disparities in dementia risk and may be integrated into existing dementia prevention programs to provide targeted interventions for community-dwelling older adults with differentiated social disadvantages.
在美国老年人中,痴呆负担存在种族或族裔差异,而对于多种健康社会决定因素在缩小这种差异方面的协同作用,人们仍缺乏了解。我们旨在构建一个痴呆综合社会评分,并调查不同综合社会评分类别的老年人中痴呆风险的种族或族裔差异。
在这项前瞻性队列研究中,我们利用了美国健康与退休研究的纵向数据,招募了6945名年龄≥65岁、在2006/2008年有24项健康社会决定因素数据的参与者。参与者的痴呆状态通过改良版的认知状态电话访谈进行测量。采用逐步Cox回归来选择与新发痴呆相关的健康社会决定因素,以构建综合社会评分。多变量泊松模型和线性混合模型分别用于研究综合社会评分与新发痴呆和认知衰退之间的关联。
八项健康社会决定因素被用于构建综合社会评分。在综合社会评分较低的类别中,非西班牙裔黑人老年参与者的发病率高于非西班牙裔白人老年参与者(发病率差异[IRD]=22.7;95%置信区间[95%CI]=12.7 - 32.8),而在综合社会评分较高的类别中,这种差异大幅减弱(IRD = 0.5;95%CI = -6.4至 -7.5)。综合社会评分较高的非西班牙裔黑人老年成年人的认知衰退比非西班牙裔白人老年成年人慢84.6%(平均认知衰退:非西班牙裔白人:-2.4[95%CI = -2.5至 -2.3],非西班牙裔黑人:-1.3[95%CI = -1.9至 -0.8])。
这些发现可能有助于全面理解和解决痴呆风险中的种族和族裔差异,并可纳入现有的痴呆预防项目,为具有不同社会劣势的社区居住老年人提供有针对性的干预措施。