PATH ANALYSIS OF EDUCATION AND DISEASE BURDEN IN DEMENTIA VULNERABILITY

TitlePATH ANALYSIS OF EDUCATION AND DISEASE BURDEN IN DEMENTIA VULNERABILITY
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsHubner, SB, Kim, HJung, Boron, JBlaskewicz
JournalInnovation in Aging
Volume3
IssueSuppl 1
PaginationS704 - S704
Date Published2019/11/08
ISBN Number2399-5300
KeywordsDementia, dementia vulnerability, Education
Abstract

When considering the various extrinsic variables that may affect disease vulnerability, it is valuable to study temporal ordering of factors to identify areas for disease intervention efforts. This study sought to inform improvement of networks for the purposes of education and health by attempting to better define the causal ordering of ethnicity, age, gender, education, disease burden, and dementia diagnosis with the Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study, a sub-study of the Health and Retirement Study. Participants and/or proxies self-reported total number of chronic conditions, subsequently regarded as disease burden. Assessments occurred over four waves; participants were not reassessed after dementia diagnosis. The current study categorized participants as demented (n=414), identified in any wave, or normal (n=117), identified in the final wave. Cognitively-impaired-not-demented and deceased participants were not considered due to lack of diagnosis. Cross-sectional weighting was used. A path model was developed; ethnicity, age, and gender were antecedent to education, and education was casually ordered before disease burden, which was antecedent to dementia diagnosis. A series of logistic and linear regression analyses were conducted. Results revealed that being non-white (Σβ=0.643, all p’s<.001), of older age (Σβ=0.250, all p’s<.001), female (Σβ=0.180, all p’s<.001), and having increased disease burden (Σβ=0.118, p<.001) all demonstrated a positive total effect on dementia diagnosis. Conversely, more years of education (Σβ=-0.245, p<.001) had a negative total effect on diagnosis. The education to disease burden pathway was non-significant. Ultimately, these results may indicate a need for dementia interventions that target those with low education or high disease burden.

URLhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6845840/
Short TitleInnov Aging
Citation Key10463