4 results
Social connections and risk of incident mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality in 13 longitudinal cohort studies of ageing
- Gowsaly Mahalingam, Suraj Samtani, Ben Chun Pan Lam, Darren M Lipnicki, Maria Fernanda Lima-Costa, Sergio Luis Blay, Erico Castro-Costa, Xiao Shifu, Maëlenn Guerchet, Pierre-Marie Preux, Antoine Gbessemehlan, Ingmar Skoog, Jenna Najar, Therese Rydberg Sterner, Nikolaos Scarmeas, Mary Yannakoulia, Themis Dardiotis, Ki-Woong Kim, Steffi Riedel-Heller, Susanne Röhr, Alexander Pabst, Suzana Shahar, Katya Numbers, Mary Ganguli, Tiffany F. Hughes, Ching-Chou H. Chang, Michael Crowe, Tze Pin Ng, Xinyi Gwee, Denise Qian Ling Chua, representatives from SHARED work packages, Joanna Rymaszewska, Karin Wolf-Ostermann, Anna-Karin Welmer, Jean Stafford, Myrra Vernooij-Dassen, Yun-Hee Jeon, Perminder S Sachdev, Henry Brodaty
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- Journal:
- International Psychogeriatrics / Volume 35 / Issue S1 / December 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 February 2024, pp. 16-17
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Background:
Good social connections are proposed to positively influence the course of cognitive decline by stimulating cognitive reserve and buffering harmful stress-related health effects. Prior meta-analytic research has uncovered links between social connections and the risk of poor health outcomes such as mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality. These studies have primarily used aggregate data from North America and Europe with limited markers of social connections. Further research is required to explore these associations longitudinally across a wider range of social connection markers in a global setting.
Research Objective:We examined the associations between social connection structure, function, and quality and the risk of our primary outcomes (mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality).
Method:Individual participant-level data were obtained from 13 longitudinal studies of ageing from across the globe. We conducted survival analysis using Cox regression models and combined estimates from each study using two-stage meta-analysis. We examined three social constructs: connection structure (living situation, relationship status, interactions with friends/family, community group engagement), function (social support, having a confidante) and quality (relationship satisfaction, loneliness) in relation to the risks of three primary outcomes (mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality). In our partially adjusted models, we included age, sex, and education and in fully adjusted models used these variables as well as diabetes, hypertension, smoking, cardiovascular risk, and depression.
Preliminary results of the ongoing study:In our fully adjusted models we observed: a lower risk of mild cognitive impairment was associated with being married/in a relationship (vs. being single), weekly community group engagement (vs. no engagement), weekly family/friend interactions (vs. not interacting), and never feeling lonely (vs. often feeling lonely); a lower risk of dementia was associated with monthly/weekly family/friend interactions and having a confidante (vs. no confidante); a lower risk of mortality was associated with living with others (vs. living alone), yearly/monthly/weekly community group engagement, and having a confidante.
Conclusion:Good social connection structure, function, and quality are associated with reduced risk of incident MCI, dementia, and mortality. Our results provide actionable evidence that social connections are required for healthy ageing.
Conceptual framework for social health: identification of modifiable and protective and risk factors
- Myrra Vernooij-Dassen, Eline Verspoor, Suraj Samtani, Perminder S Sachdev, M. Arfan Ikram, Meike W. Vernooij, Claudia Hubers, Rabih Chattat, Marta Lenart-Bugla, Joanna Rymaszewska, Dorota Szczesnia, Henry Brodaty, Anna-Karin Welmer, Jane Maddock, Isabelle F van der Velpen, Henrik Wiegelman, Anna Marseglia, Marcus Richards, Rene Melis, Marjolein de Vugt, Esme Moniz-Cook, Yun-Hee Jeon, Marieke Perry, Karin Wolf-Ostermann, INTERDEM taskforce social health
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- Journal:
- International Psychogeriatrics / Volume 35 / Issue S1 / December 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 February 2024, p. 15
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Objective:
The recognition of dementia as a multifactorial disorder encourages the exploration of new pathways to understand its origins. Social health might play a role in cognitive decline and dementia, but conceptual clarity is lacking and this hinders investigation of associations and mechanisms. Social health might provide a new perspective on social connectedness. The objective is to develop a conceptual framework for social health to advance conceptual clarity in future studies and to identify potentially modifiable risk and protective factors in the “Social Health And Reserve in the Dementia patient journey (SHARED)” project.
Methods:The methods include the process of building the conceptual framework. We used the following steps: underpinning for concept advancement, concept advancement by the development of a conceptual model, and exploration of its potential feasibility.
Results:Underpinning of the concept drew from a synthesis of theoretical, conceptual and epidemiological work, and resulted in the definition of social health as well-being that relies on capacities both of the individual and the social environment. In the conceptual framework the abstract definition has been elaborated into more precisely defined domains at both the individual and the social environmental levels. This allowed to identify domain related social health characteristics or markers in epidemiological data bases and to investigate associations between these markers and cognitive decline and dementia. The associated social health markers represent potentially modifiable risk and protective factors. Examples are “social engagement” in the participation domain at the individual level, and “frequency of contact” in the structure domain, “exchange of support” in the function domain and “loneliness” in the appraisal domain at the environmental level. The conceptual framework facilitated identification of domain related markers in the SHARED project, thus showing its potential feasibility.
Discussion:The conceptual framework provides guidance for future research and facilitates identification of potentially modifiable risk and protective factors. These may shape new avenues for preventive interventions. We highlight the paradigm of social health in dementia as a priority for dementia research.
FC40: Social health and subsequent cognitive capability: examining the potential mediating roles of depression symptoms and inflammatory biomarker
- Jean Stafford, Serhiy Dekhtyar, Ke Ning, Anna-Karin Welmer, Davide L Vetrano, Giulia Grande, Anna Marseglia, Vanessa G Moulton, Rosie Mansfield, Yiwen Liu, George Ploubidis, Giorgio Di Gessa, Marcus Richards, Daniel Davis, Praveetha Patalay, Jane Maddock
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- Journal:
- International Psychogeriatrics / Volume 35 / Issue S1 / December 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 February 2024, pp. 102-103
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Objective:
Social health (SH) markers, including marital status, contact frequency, network size, and social support, have been linked with increased cognitive capability. However, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. We aim to investigate whether depression symptoms and inflammatory biomarkers mediate associations between SH and cognitive outcomes.
Methods:We used data from waves 1-9 of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, involving 7,136 participants aged 50 or older at baseline. First, we examined associations between SH (wave 1) and depression and inflammatory biomarkers (C-reactive protein (CRP) and fibrinogen) (wave 2) using linear regression models. Second, we tested associations between a) SH and b) depression and inflammation with subsequent standardised verbal fluency and memory in wave 3 and change between waves 3-9, indexed using slopes derived from multilevel models. We adjusted for age, sex, socio-economic position, cardiovascular disease, basic and instrumental activities of daily living, health behaviours, and baseline depression symptoms and cognition. We will also conduct causal mediation analysis.
Results:All SH markers, except contact frequency, were associated with lower subsequent depression, but not inflammatory biomarkers. Greater contact frequency (e.g. once-twice a week vs <once per year: β=0.18 [0.01, 0.36]) and less negative support (β=0.02 [0.00, 0.03]) were associated with higher verbal fluency. Larger network size (>6 people vs none: β=0.007SD/year [0.001, 0.012]), less negative (β=0.001SD/year [0.001, 0.002]) and more positive support (β=0.001SD/year [0.000, 0.001]) were linked with slower memory decline, and more positive support predicted slower verbal fluency decline (β=0.001SD/year [0.000, 0.001]). Depression symptoms were associated with lower memory and verbal fluency, and faster memory decline (β=-0.001SD/year [-0.001, -0.000]) and verbal fluency (β=-0.001SD/year [-0.001, -0.000]). CRP was associated with lower verbal fluency (β=-0.02 [-0.04, 0.00]), whereas fibrinogen was linked with faster memory decline (β=-0.001SD/year [-0.003, -0.000]).
Conclusion:Depression symptoms and SH showed associations with subsequent cognitive capability and change. SH was linked with lower depression, but not inflammatory biomarkers. Findings highlight the potential for depression to underpin associations between SH and cognition, a pathway which we will test using causal mediation analysis. We will also examine whether findings replicate in the Swedish National Study of Aging and Care in Kungsholmen.
Maintaining cognitive function with internet use: a two-country, six-year longitudinal study
- Jessica Berner, Hannie Comijs, Sölve Elmståhl, Anna-Karin Welmer, Johan Sanmartin Berglund, Peter Anderberg, Dorly Deeg
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- Journal:
- International Psychogeriatrics / Volume 31 / Issue 7 / July 2019
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 09 August 2019, pp. 929-936
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Objectives:
Maintaining good cognitive function with aging may be aided by technology such as computers, tablets, and their applications. Little research so far has investigated whether internet use helps to maintain cognitive function over time.
Design:Two population-based studies with a longitudinal design from 2001/2003 (T1) to 2007/2010 (T2).
Setting:Sweden and the Netherlands.
Participants:Older adults aged 66 years and above from the Swedish National Study on Ageing and Care (N = 2,564) and from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (N = 683).
Measurements:Internet use was self-reported. Using the scores from the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) from T1 and T2, both a difference score and a significant change index was calculated. Linear and logistic regression analysis were performed with difference score and significant change index, respectively, as the dependent variable and internet use as the independent variable, and adjusted for sex, education, age, living situation, and functional limitations. Using a meta-analytic approach, summary coefficients were calculated across both studies.
Results:Internet use at baseline was 26.4% in Sweden and 13.3% in the Netherlands. Significant cognitive decline over six years amounted to 9.2% in Sweden and 17.0% in the Netherlands. Considering the difference score, the summary linear regression coefficient for internet use was −0.32 (95% CI: −0.62, −0.02). Considering the significant change index, the summary odds ratio for internet use was 0.54 (95% CI: 0.37, 0.78).
Conclusions:The results suggest that internet use might play a role in maintaining cognitive functioning. Further research into the specific activities that older adults are doing on the internet may shine light on this issue.