Affiliation:
1. School of Public and Community Health Sciences University of Montana Missoula Montana USA
2. Division of Research Kaiser Permanente Northern California Oakland California USA
3. Department of Public Health Sciences University of California Davis Davis California USA
4. Department of Neurology University of California Davis Sacramento California USA
5. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundModifiable risks for dementia are more prevalent in rural populations, yet there is a dearth of research examining life course rural residence on late‐life cognitive decline.MethodsThe association of rural residence and socioeconomic status (SES) in childhood and adulthood with late‐life cognitive domains (verbal episodic memory, executive function, and semantic memory) and cognitive decline in the Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences cohort was estimated using marginal structural models with stabilized inverse probability weights.ResultsAfter adjusting for time‐varying SES, the estimated marginal effect of rural residence in childhood was harmful for both executive function (β = −0.19, 95% confidence interval [CI] = −0.32, −0.06) and verbal episodic memory (β = −0.22, 95% CI = −0.35, −0.08). Effects of adult rural residence were imprecisely estimated with beneficial point estimates for both executive function (β = 0.19; 95% CI = −0.07, 0.44) and verbal episodic memory (β = 0.24, 95% CI = −0.07, 0.55).ConclusionsChildhood rurality is associated with poorer late‐life cognition independent of SES.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
4 articles.
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