Neighborhood status influences older women's
cognitive function, study finds
August 3, 2011--Older women who live in a
lower socioeconomic status neighborhood are
more likely to exhibit lower cognitive
functioning than women who live in more
affluent neighborhoods, according to a new
RAND Corporation study.
The study, published online by the American
Journal of Public Health, is the largest
of its type to examine whether living in a
poor neighborhood is associated with lower
cognitive function.
The study found that potential confounders
such as vascular health, health behaviors
and psychosocial factors such as depressive
symptoms explained only a portion of the
relationship between neighborhood
socioeconomic status and cognitive function.
"This study provides the best evidence yet
that living in a neighborhood with lower
socioeconomic standing can have an impact on
women's cognitive abilities in late life,"
said Regina A. Shih, the study's lead author
and a behavioral scientist at RAND, a
nonprofit research organization.
"More work is needed to find out whether
living in a lower socioeconomic status
neighborhood influences cognitive decline
that may affect a woman's risk of developing
dementia, and to consider ways to
intervene."
Researchers analyzed information collected
from 6,137 women from across the United
States who were surveyed as a part of the
Women's Health Initiative Memory Study, an
ancillary study to the Women's Health
Initiative hormone therapy trials.
Women from 39 locations who were at least 65
years old and free of dementia were enrolled
in the memory study from May 1996 to
December 1999. All the women in the study
were given a standard test that measures
cognitive function by assessing items such
as memory, reasoning and spatial functions.
Researchers found that women who lived in
neighborhoods with lower socioeconomic
status were substantially more likely to
have low cognitive scores than similar women
who lived in more affluent neighborhoods.
Unlike previous reports, the latest study
did not find that older individuals are more
vulnerable to the effects of neighborhood
socioeconomic status because of a longer
exposure to poor or declining neighborhoods.
The study also found that non-whites may be
particularly vulnerable to the effects of
living in a neighborhood with a lower
socioeconomic status. But researchers did
not find that an individual's income level
or education strengthened or weakened the
relationship between neighborhood
socioeconomic status and their cognitive
functioning.