Journal Article Annotations
2024, 3rd Quarter
Annotations by Felipe León, MD
October, 2024
The finding:
This study is a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from the Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Aging. More years spent in employment stability at midlife were independently associated with decreased odds of cognitive impairment no dementia (CIND) and dementia at older ages. Late-life household per capita income showed a buffering effect against dementia in mutually adjusted analyses combining all socioeconomic factors, but this association was not observed for CIND. More years spent in education showed a robust buffering effect against dementia among women but not among men. However, the buffering effect of early-life educational attainment in women was not evident for CIND.
Strength and weaknesses:
The principal strength of the current study is the sizeable statistical power provided by a population-based sample encompassing information on older adults. This study adds to the scant literature on sex as an effect modifier of life-course socioeconomic determinants of cognitive health, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The principal limitation is the cross-sectional nature of this study that precludes inferring causality between the analyzed socioeconomic determinants and late-life CIND or dementia, and hence it only allows analyzing associations among the variables without implying any causal relationship.
Relevance:
This study shows the relevance of biopsychosocial factors in the development of cognitive impairment and dementia.