Social and health disparities associated with healthy brain ageing in Brazil and in other Latin American countries.

IF 19.9 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Lancet Global Health Pub Date : 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1016/S2214-109X(24)00451-0
Lucas U Da Ros, Wyllians Vendramini Borelli, Cristiano Schaffer Aguzzoli, Marco Antônio De Bastiani, Lucas Porcello Schilling, Hernando Santamaria-Garcia, Tharick A Pascoal, Pedro Rosa-Neto, Diogo O Souza, Jaderson Costa da Costa, Agustin Ibañez, Claudia Kimie Suemoto, Eduardo R Zimmer
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Abstract

Background: Latin American countries present major health-related inequities due to historical, cultural, and social aspects. Recent evidence highlights that factors related to social and health disparities outweigh classic demographic factors in determining healthy brain aging in these populations. However, these analyses have not been conducted with the Brazilian population, the largest and most ethnically diverse population in Latin America.

Methods: Here, we evaluated demographic, social, and health factors for healthy brain ageing using a machine learning model in a Brazilian population-based cohort (n=9412) and in additional cohorts from other Latin American countries, including Colombia (n=23 694), Chile (n=1301), Ecuador (n=5235), and Uruguay (n=1450).

Findings: In the Brazilian population and other Latin American countries, social and health disparities were more influential than demographic factors for cognition and functional ability. Uniquely in Brazil, education emerged as the primary risk factor impacting cognitive outcomes, diverging from other Latin American countries where mental health symptoms played more prominent roles. In terms of functional ability, Brazil displayed a distinct pattern, with mental health symptoms identified as the primary contributing factor.

Interpretation: Our findings indicate that Brazil converges with other Latin American countries to show that heterogeneous factors impacted more than demographic factors, but also showed a unique set of health factors when compared with other Latin American countries. Therefore, our study emphasises that social and health disparity factors are relevant predictors of healthy brain ageing in Latin America, but population-specific analyses are necessary to identify the specific risk profiles of each country.

Funding: None.

Translations: For the Portuguese and Spanish translations of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.

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巴西和其他拉丁美洲国家与大脑健康老化相关的社会和健康差异。
背景:由于历史、文化和社会方面的原因,拉丁美洲国家存在重大的卫生不平等。最近的证据强调,在这些人群中,与社会和健康差异相关的因素在决定健康的大脑衰老方面超过了传统的人口因素。然而,这些分析并没有针对拉丁美洲人口最多、种族最多样化的巴西人口进行。方法:在这里,我们使用机器学习模型在巴西人口为基础的队列(n=9412)和其他拉丁美洲国家的队列(包括哥伦比亚(n= 23694)、智利(n=1301)、厄瓜多尔(n=5235)和乌拉圭(n=1450)中评估了健康脑老化的人口统计学、社会和健康因素。研究结果:在巴西和其他拉丁美洲国家,社会和健康差异对认知和功能能力的影响大于人口因素。独特的是,在巴西,教育成为影响认知结果的主要风险因素,与心理健康症状发挥更突出作用的其他拉丁美洲国家不同。在功能能力方面,巴西表现出一种独特的模式,精神健康症状被确定为主要影响因素。解释:我们的研究结果表明,巴西与其他拉丁美洲国家趋同,表明异质因素比人口因素影响更大,但与其他拉丁美洲国家相比,也显示出一组独特的健康因素。因此,我们的研究强调,社会和健康差异因素是拉丁美洲健康脑老化的相关预测因素,但有必要对人口进行具体分析,以确定每个国家的具体风险概况。资金:没有。翻译:有关摘要的葡萄牙语和西班牙语翻译,请参阅补充资料部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Lancet Global Health
Lancet Global Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
44.10
自引率
1.20%
发文量
763
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Global Health is an online publication that releases monthly open access (subscription-free) issues.Each issue includes original research, commentary, and correspondence.In addition to this, the publication also provides regular blog posts. The main focus of The Lancet Global Health is on disadvantaged populations, which can include both entire economic regions and marginalized groups within prosperous nations.The publication prefers to cover topics related to reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child, and adolescent health; infectious diseases (including neglected tropical diseases); non-communicable diseases; mental health; the global health workforce; health systems; surgery; and health policy.
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