Memory Trajectories Before and After a Negative Wealth Shock, the United States Health and Retirement Study, 1998-2020.

Year of Publication
0
Author
Journal
Am J Epidemiol
ISSN Number
1476-6256
Abstract

The potential for a bidirectional relationship between the experience of a negative wealth shock (a loss of ≥75% in total household wealth over two years) and accelerated memory decline among mid-to-later-life adults in the United States remains unclear. We used population-based longitudinal data on 14,969 adults aged ≥51 in the US Health and Retirement Study from 1998 to 2020. One in three participants in this cohort experienced a negative wealth shock over the 22-year follow-up period (5,184/14,969; 34.6%). Participants who experienced a negative wealth shock had faster aging-related memory decline in the years before the shock than their counterparts who did not experience a negative wealth shock (an additional 0.04 SD units per decade; 95% CI: -0.07, -0.01) and an acute drop in their level of memory function concurrent with the negative wealth shock (-0.08 SD units; 95% CI: -0.10, -0.05), yet slower memory aging after the negative wealth shock (0.04 SD units per decade; 95% CI: 0.01, 0.06). We recommend strategies to support healthy memory aging of the large share of middle-aged and older US adults who are at risk of experiencing a negative wealth shock.

DOI
10.1093/aje/kwaf272
PMID
41360511
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