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Health disparities among African Americans (AAs) in the United States are evident, especially among older adults and people living with HIV (PLWH). These health disparities include worse cognitive functioning among AAs than White counterparts. Though disparities in health literacy among AAs impact health outcomes across clinical populations, less is known on the mechanistic role health literacy may play in explaining racial differences in cognitive functioning among older PLWH. The current study investigated the association between health literacy and global cognitive functioning among middle-aged and older AA and White adults with and without HIV in the Deep South.
Participants and Methods:
Two hundred and seventy-three people (170 PLWH: 146 AA, 24 White; 103 HIV-negative: 67 AA, 36 White) were enrolled in an observational study and completed measures of sociodemographic characteristics, as well as the reading subtest of the Wide Range Achievement Test-3rd Edition to assess verbal IQ. A composite score of socioeconomic status (SES) was created using total years of education and annual household income. Neurocognitive functioning was assessed using a comprehensive cognitive battery (i.e., verbal, attention/working memory, executive function, learning, recall, speed of processing, and motor), from which a sample-based global Z-score composite was created. Health literacy was measured using a sample-based composite Z-score derived from the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine, Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults Reading Comprehension, Newest Vital Sign, and Expanded Numeracy Scale. First, multivariable linear regression analyses were performed within both PLWH and HIV-negative samples examining the association between race, SES, verbal IQ, and health literacy with cognitive functioning. These results informed two bootstrap confidence interval mediation analyses to determine whether health literacy mediated the association between race and global cognitive functioning.
Results:
In both PLWH and HIV-negative individuals, linear regressions showed that Whites had better global cognitive functioning, health literacy, and verbal IQ than AAs. Linear regressions showed that health literacy had an independent association with cognitive function when accounting for verbal IQ and SES. Mediations showed that health literacy significantly mediated the association between race and global cognitive functioning in both samples, independent of verbal IQ (PLWH: b = .07, 95% CI [0.0096, 0.2149]; HIV-negative: b = .15, 95% CI [0.0518, 0.2877]), indicating that Whites were expected to obtain higher global cognitive Z-scores than AAs in both PLWH and HIV-negative samples, through the mediating effect of better health literacy.
Conclusions:
Health literacy significantly mediated the association between race and global cognitive functioning among middle-aged and older adults with and without HIV, underscoring the importance of health literacy in explaining racial disparities in cognitive outcomes among AAs in the Deep South. Findings have implications for guiding clinicians and healthcare providers in developing interventions that promote health literacy in these underserved populations, which may have downstream impacts on cognitive functioning. Future work is needed to examine mechanisms whereby health literacy impacts neurocognition among AA PLWH.
People with HIV (PWH) are at an increased risk for cognitive impairment as they age compared to their HIV-negative counterparts. Lifestyle factors can have protective effects on cognitive outcomes among PWH. However, little work has examined diet quality and cognitive function in PWH. Examining the association between diet quality and cognitive function among PWH is particularly important given this population’s increased risk for both poor diet quality and cognitive impairment. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between diet and cognitive function in aging PWH.
Participants and Methods:
This cross-sectional study was conducted in Birmingham, Alabama and Cleveland, Ohio. Eighty-six PWH (mean age 56 years) completed standard triple-pass 24-hour diet recalls and a neurocognitive assessment. Partial Pearson’s correlations were conducted between diet variables and global neurocognitive function T scores, adjusting for total calories, sex, and education level.
Results:
Overall diet quality of the sample was poor. The overall sample presented with low Healthy Eating Index (HEI)-2015 scores, high glycemic index, twice the goal amount for saturated fatty acids (SFAs), and inadequate consumption of several nutrients typically associated with cognitive health including omega-3 fatty acids, dietary protein, fiber, Vitamin D, Zinc, and several B-vitamins. Greater total calories per day (r=0.28, p<0.05), greater percentage of total calories of SFAs (r=0.26, p<0.01), and lower glycemic index (r=-0.24, p<0.05) were associated with better cognition. Higher intake of several individual fatty acids, particularly SFAs, were associated with better cognition (correlations ranging from 0.23 to 0.31). Higher intakes of phosphorus (r=0.29, p<0.01), magnesium (r=0.25, p<0.05), and potassium (r=0.22, p<0.05) were associated with better cognition. Higher grams/day of several amino acids were associated with better cognition (correlations ranging from 0.22 to 0.27).
Conclusions:
In a sample with overall poor diet quality not meeting recommended guidelines, findings suggest that being nourished in itself is associated with better cognitive function. Associations with several individual nutrients may inform potential intervention targets to protect brain health in PWH. Further, targeting food insecurity in interventions may have downstream effects on cognition in PWH.
Informed consent for surgery is a complex process particularly in paediatrics. Complexity increases with procedures such as CHD surgery. Regulatory agencies outline informed consent contents for surgery. We assessed and described CHD surgical informed consent contents through survey dissemination to paediatric CHD centres across United States of America.
Methods:
Publicly available email addresses for 125 paediatric cardiac clinicians at 70 CHD surgical centres were obtained. Nine-item de-identified survey assessing adherence to The Joint Commission informed consent standards was created and distributed via RedCap® 14 March, 2023. A follow-up email was sent 29 March, 2023. Survey link was closed 18 April, 2023.
Results:
Thirty-seven surveys were completed. Results showed informed consent documents were available in both paper (25, 68%) and electronic (3, 8%) format. When both (9, 24%) formats were available, decision on which format to use was based on centre protocols (1, 11%), clinician personal preference (3, 33%), procedure being performed (1, 11%), or other (4, 45%). Five (13%) centres’ informed consent documents were available only in English, with 32 (87%) centres also having a Spanish version. Review of informed consent documents demonstrated missing The Joint Commission elements including procedure specific risks, benefits, treatment alternatives, and expected outcomes.
Conclusions:
Informed consent for CHD surgery is a complex process with multiple factors involved. Majority of paediatric CHD surgical centres in the United States of America used a generic informed consent document which did not uniformly contain The Joint Commission specified information nor reflect time spent in discussion with families. Further research is needed on parental comprehension during the informed consent process.