Propensity Scores in Health Disparities Research: The Example of Cognitive Aging and the Hispanic Paradox

Author:

Kezios Katrina L.1ORCID,Zimmerman Scott C.2,Zhang Adina1,Calonico Sebastian3ORCID,Jawadekar Neal1ORCID,Glymour M. Maria2ORCID,Zeki Al Hazzouri Adina1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY

2. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, CA

3. Department of Health Policy and Management, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY.

Abstract

Background: Individuals of Mexican ancestry in the United States experience substantial socioeconomic disadvantages compared with non-Hispanic white individuals; however, some studies show these groups have similar dementia risk. Evaluating whether migration selection factors (e.g., education) associated with risk of Alzheimer disease and related dementia (ADRD) explain this paradoxical finding presents statistical challenges. Intercorrelation of risk factors, common with social determinants, could make certain covariate patterns very likely or unlikely to occur for particular groups, which complicates their comparison. Propensity score (PS) methods could be leveraged here to diagnose nonoverlap and help balance exposure groups. Methods: We compare conventional and PS-based methods to examine differences in cognitive trajectories between foreign-born Mexican American, US-born Mexican American, and US-born non-Hispanic white individuals in the Health and Retirement Study (1994–2018). We examined cognition using a global measure. We estimated trajectories of cognitive decline from linear mixed models adjusted for migration selection factors also associated with ADRD risk conventionally or with inverse probability weighting. We also employed PS trimming and match weighting. Results: In the full sample, where PS overlap was poor, unadjusted analyses showed both Mexican ancestry groups had worse baseline cognitive scores but similar or slower rates of decline compared with non-Hispanic white adults; adjusted findings were similar, regardless of method. Focusing analyses on populations where PS overlap was improved (PS trimming and match weighting) did not alter conclusions. Conclusions: Attempting to equalize groups on migration selection and ADRD risk factors did not explain paradoxical findings for Mexican ancestry groups in our study.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Epidemiology

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