Farmer Justin G, Macchia Lucía, Bu Feifei, Gong Jessica, Steptoe Andrew, Demakakos Panayotes, Kubzansky Laura D
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
School of Health and Psychological Sciences, City, University of London, London, UK.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2025 Feb 10;80(3). doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbaf004.
Prosociality, defined as positive other-regarding intentions and behaviors, is a modifiable factor demonstrated to be associated with better mental, physical, and cognitive health in older adults. Prior studies have largely focused on individual prosocial behaviors, especially volunteering. This study examines whether prosocial intentions are associated with maintaining cognitive health over time.
Data are from 7,844 adults aged 50 or older in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. A 9-item prosocial intentions scale was derived from self-reported items assessing altruism and collectivism. Cognitive health was assessed via biennial completion of tasks related to executive function and verbal memory and incident dementia diagnosis over 11 years. Linear mixed-effects models examined relationships between prosocial intentions and changes in executive function and verbal memory. Cox proportional hazards models assessed risk of developing dementia. A broad array of demographic, socioeconomic, and health-related covariates were also considered.
Results from mixed-effects analyses suggest higher prosocial intentions are associated with better cognitive health maintenance after controlling for sociodemographics and baseline health characteristics including depressive symptoms. Participants with high versus low prosocial intentions had 24% slower decline in verbal memory and 55% slower decline in executive function. Similarly, higher prosocial intentions were associated with a 35% reduced hazard of dementia during this same period in fully adjusted models.
These results suggest aspects of prosociality beyond formal volunteering facilitate maintaining cognitive health among older adults and may provide novel targets for future interventions to enhance healthy aging.
亲社会行为被定义为积极的他人导向意图和行为,是一个可改变的因素,已被证明与老年人更好的心理、身体和认知健康相关。先前的研究主要集中在个体亲社会行为,尤其是志愿服务。本研究探讨亲社会意图是否与随时间维持认知健康相关。
数据来自英国老龄化纵向研究中的7844名50岁及以上成年人。一个9项亲社会意图量表源自评估利他主义和集体主义的自我报告项目。通过每两年完成与执行功能和言语记忆相关的任务以及11年期间的新发痴呆症诊断来评估认知健康。线性混合效应模型研究亲社会意图与执行功能和言语记忆变化之间的关系。Cox比例风险模型评估患痴呆症的风险。还考虑了一系列广泛的人口统计学、社会经济和健康相关协变量。
混合效应分析结果表明,在控制社会人口统计学和包括抑郁症状在内的基线健康特征后,较高的亲社会意图与更好的认知健康维持相关。亲社会意图高与低的参与者言语记忆衰退速度慢24%,执行功能衰退速度慢55%。同样,在完全调整模型中,较高的亲社会意图与同期患痴呆症的风险降低35%相关。
这些结果表明,除了正式志愿服务之外,亲社会行为的各个方面有助于老年人维持认知健康,并可能为未来促进健康老龄化的干预措施提供新的目标。