Parental Education, Midlife Hypertension, and Disparities in Late-Life Cognitive Test Scores: Application of an Equity-Focused Causal Decomposition Approach.
Tamare V Adrien, Andrew K Hirst, Indira C Turney, Rachel L Peterson, Laura B Zahodne, Ruijia Chen, Paul K Crane, Shellie-Anne Levy, Ryan M Andrews, Elizabeth R Mayeda, Rachel A Whitmer, Paola Gilsanz, John W Jackson, Eleanor Hayes-Larson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Parental education is an important determinant of late-life cognition, but the extent to which intervening on midlife risk factors, such as hypertension, mitigates the impact of early-life factors is unclear. Novel methodological approaches, such as causal decomposition, facilitate the assessment of contributors to health inequities through hypothetical interventions on mediating risk factors.
Methods: Using harmonized cohorts (Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences Study; Study of Healthy Aging in African Americans) and a ratio of mediator probability weights decomposition approach, we quantified disparities in late-life cognitive test scores (semantic memory, executive function, and verbal memory z-scores) across high versus low parental education, and evaluated whether socioeconomic disparities in late-life cognitive test scores would change if the corresponding disparity in midlife hypertension were eliminated.
Results: We observed substantial disparities across levels of parental education in late-life cognitive test scores (eg, =-0.72 95% CI: -0.84 to -0.60 for semantic memory). Hypothetical intervention on midlife hypertension did not substantially reduce disparities in any cognitive domain. Patterns were similar when stratified by race.
Conclusions: Future work should evaluate other points of intervention across the lifecourse (eg, participant education) to reduce late-life cognitive disparities across levels of parental education.
期刊介绍:
Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal directed to an audience of clinicians and researchers, with primary emphasis on Alzheimer disease and associated disorders. The journal publishes original articles emphasizing research in humans including epidemiologic studies, clinical trials and experimental studies, studies of diagnosis and biomarkers, as well as research on the health of persons with dementia and their caregivers. The scientific portion of the journal is augmented by reviews of the current literature, concepts, conjectures, and hypotheses in dementia, brief reports, and letters to the editor.