Wong Jason, Zang Emma
Department of Sociology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Department of Sociology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA; Department of Biostatistics, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA; The Yale Jackson School of Global Affairs, New Haven, CT, USA.
Health Place. 2025 Jul;94:103475. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2025.103475. Epub 2025 Apr 30.
Regional disparities in cognitive impairment are well-documented, but the combined impact of birth and current residence remains unclear. Prior studies examine geographic patterns, yet none estimate years spent in different cognitive states-key for understanding long-term health and policy implications. Using data from the 1998-2020 Health and Retirement Study (105,491 observations from 19,213 individuals), we employ a Bayesian multistate life table approach to estimate cognitively healthy and impaired life expectancies at age 50 across different combinations of birth and current regions. Our findings show that birth region plays a stronger role in cognitive impairment risk than current residence. At age 50, Southern-born individuals, regardless of where they live later, have fewer years without cognitive impairment (Men: 20.5-21.5; Women: 24.8-25.4) and more years with dementia (Men: 2.3-2.5; Women: 3.0-3.1) than those born elsewhere. Those both born and living in the South have the shortest cognitively healthy life expectancy. Regional differences based on current residence alone are minimal and only evident when considered alongside birthplace. Beyond the Southern birth disadvantage, we also identify a Western birth disadvantage, particularly in life expectancy with dementia and, for women, a higher percentage of life spent with cognitive impairment but not dementia. This suggests that Western-born individuals, especially women, may experience prolonged cognitive decline even if they avoid full-blown dementia. These findings provide new evidence of the lasting impact of early-life geographic exposures on cognitive impairment risk, underscoring that growing up in certain regions, particularly the South and, in some respects, the West, can shape cognitive health trajectories decades later.
认知障碍的地区差异已有充分记录,但出生地区和当前居住地区的综合影响仍不明确。先前的研究考察了地理模式,但没有一项研究估计在不同认知状态下度过的年数,而这对于理解长期健康和政策影响至关重要。利用1998 - 2020年健康与退休研究的数据(来自19213名个体的105491条观测数据),我们采用贝叶斯多状态生命表方法来估计50岁时在不同出生地区和当前居住地区组合下的认知健康预期寿命和认知障碍预期寿命。我们的研究结果表明,出生地区在认知障碍风险中所起的作用比当前居住地区更强。在50岁时,出生在南方的个体,无论他们后来居住在哪里,与出生在其他地方的个体相比,无认知障碍的年数更少(男性:20.5 - 21.5年;女性:24.8 - 25.4年),患痴呆症的年数更多(男性:2.3 - 2.5年;女性:3.0 - 3.1年)。那些出生并居住在南方的个体认知健康预期寿命最短。仅基于当前居住地区的区域差异很小,只有在与出生地一起考虑时才明显。除了南方出生的劣势外,我们还发现了西方出生的劣势,特别是在患痴呆症的预期寿命方面,而且对于女性来说,在有认知障碍但未患痴呆症的生命中所占比例更高。这表明出生在西方的个体,尤其是女性,即使避免了全面痴呆症,也可能经历长期的认知衰退。这些发现为早期生活的地理暴露对认知障碍风险的持久影响提供了新证据,强调了在某些地区成长,特别是南方以及在某些方面西方,会在几十年后塑造认知健康轨迹。