AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), specifically parental substance abuse and physical abuse, impact cognitive health in older adults, using a comprehensive set of neuropsychological tests.
  • It analyzed data from over 3,300 older adults and identified that parental substance abuse correlated with poorer cognitive function through factors like education and stroke, while parental physical abuse affected cognition mainly through stroke.
  • The findings suggest long-lasting effects of these ACEs on cognitive aging and highlight the need for further research on other ACEs and their potential intervention strategies.

Article Abstract

Objective: Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been associated with worse cognitive health in older adulthood. This study aimed to extend findings on the specificity, persistence, and pathways of associations between two ACEs and cognition by using a comprehensive neuropsychological battery and a time-lagged mediation design.

Method: Participants were 3304 older adults in the Health and Retirement Study Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol. Participants retrospectively reported whether they were exposed to parental substance abuse or experienced parental physical abuse before age 18. Factor scores derived from a battery of 13 neuropsychological tests indexed cognitive domains of episodic memory, executive functioning, processing speed, language, and visuospatial function. Structural equation models examined self-reported years of education and stroke as mediators, controlling for sociodemographics and childhood socioeconomic status.

Results: Parental substance abuse in childhood was associated with worse later-life cognitive function across all domains, in part via pathways involving educational attainment and stroke. Parental physical abuse was associated with worse cognitive outcomes via stroke independent of education.

Conclusions: This national longitudinal study in the United States provides evidence for broad and persistent indirect associations between two ACEs and cognitive aging via differential pathways involving educational attainment and stroke. Future research should examine additional ACEs and mechanisms as well as moderators of these associations to better understand points of intervention.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S135561772300036XDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

educational attainment
12
attainment stroke
12
associated worse
12
adverse childhood
8
childhood experiences
8
later-life cognitive
8
cognitive function
8
worse cognitive
8
associations aces
8
parental substance
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!