Late-Life Social Activity and Cognitive Decline in Old Age
Rush University Medical Center · Rush University · +1 more institution
Abstract
We examined the association of social activity with cognitive decline in 1138 persons without dementia at baseline with a mean age of 79.6 (SD = 7.5) who were followed for up to 12 years (mean = 5.2; SD = 2.8). Using mixed models adjusted for age, sex, education, race, social network size, depression, chronic conditions, disability, neuroticism, extraversion, cognitive activity, and physical activity, more social activity was associated with less cognitive decline during average follow-up of 5.2 years (SD = 2.7). A one point increase in social activity score (range = 1-4.2; mean = 2.6; SD = 0.6) was associated with a 47% decrease in the rate of decline in global cognitive function (p
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.85
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
4- BDBryan D. JamesCorresponding
Rush University Medical Center, Rush University
- RSRobert S. Wilson
Rush University Medical Center, University of Illinois Chicago, Rush University
- LLLisa L. Barnes
Rush University Medical Center, University of Illinois Chicago, Rush University
- DADavid A. Bennett
Rush University Medical Center, University of Illinois Chicago, Rush University
Topics & keywords
- Cognitive decline
- Cognition
- Neuroticism
- Psychology
- Extraversion and introversion
- Percentile
- Depression (economics)
- Demography