Cumulative socioeconomic exposures, cash transfer interventions, and later-life cognitive decline and dementia risk in a low-income region of South Africa
南非低收入地区的累积社会经济风险、现金转移干预以及晚年认知能力下降和痴呆风险
基本信息
- 批准号:10055292
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 58.62万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2020
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2020-09-15 至 2024-05-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AdultAffectAfricaAfrica South of the SaharaAgeAgingAlzheimer&aposs disease related dementiaAlzheimer&aposs disease riskCensusesChildChild SupportCognitiveCommunitiesCountryDataData LinkagesData SetData SourcesElderlyEmploymentEpidemicEtiologyExposure toFutureGenderGender RoleGoalsGrantHIV prevention trials networkHealthHouseholdImpaired cognitionIncomeInequalityInterventionLife Cycle StagesLinkLongitudinal StudiesLow Income PopulationLow incomeMeasuresMemoryMemory LossMothersNatureOccupationsOlder PopulationOutcomePensionsPoliciesPopulationPovertyPrevention programPrevention strategyPreventive InterventionRandomizedRandomized Controlled TrialsResearchResourcesRoleRuralSamplingSentinelShockSocial ProtectionSocioeconomic StatusSouth AfricaSouth AfricanSystemTestingTimeUrsidae FamilyWomanWorkbasecognitive benefitscognitive functioncohortdata resourcedementia riskdesignfood securitygender disparityimprovedinnovationinsightmalemenmultidisciplinarypreventrural South Africasegregationskillssociodemographicssocioeconomicsstudy population
项目摘要
PROJECT SUMMARY
By 2050, 75% of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD) cases will occur in low- and middle-income
regions, like rural South Africa, which are severely under-represented in ADRD research. There is a critical
evidence gap on the role of socioeconomic status (SES) in ADRD etiology in low-income settings, and how SES
can best be targeted by interventions to prevent and/or delay ADRD onset. Our long-term goal is to inform the
design of gender-equitable SES interventions to prevent and/or delay ADRD onset in low-income settings. The
objective of this proposal is to identify how SES affects ADRD risk, using longitudinal exposures (household
assets, food security, and employment) and randomized and quasi-randomized cash transfer exposures
accumulated over time in mid-to-later-life in rural South Africa. Our central hypothesis is that greater cumulative
exposure to advantageous socioeconomic conditions will protect against ADRD, with differential effects for men
and women for household-level SES resources that may not be equally allocated between genders. To test this
central hypothesis, we will leverage a unique opportunity to create one of the first longitudinal data platforms to
study ADRD risk in Africa: we will link high-quality memory and ADRD outcome data collected from 2015-21 in
the population-representative “Health and Aging in Africa: A Longitudinal Study of an INDEPTH Community in
South Africa” (HAALSI; N=5059) to detailed SES exposure data collected since 2000 in the “Agincourt Health
and Sociodemographic Surveillance System” (AHDSS; a census with 100% population coverage) and the HPTN
068 randomized controlled trial of cash transfers to households from 2011-15 (N=863 households in both HPTN
068 and HAALSI). These three datasets can be linked because the AHDSS census is the sampling frame for
HAALSI and HPTN 068; we have confirmed linkage feasibility in our preliminary data. Specifically, we aim to: 1)
Determine the roles of mid-to-later life cumulative household assets, employment, and food security (2000-13;
AHDSS) in memory decline and ADRD risk (2015-21; HAALSI); 2) Determine whether exposure to cash transfer
interventions affect memory decline and ADRD by leveraging 2a) randomized cash transfers in HPTN 068; 2b)
expansion of the South African Old Age Pension for men; 2c) expansion of the South African Child Support Grant
for mothers; and 3) Determine how gender modifies the effects of household-level SES exposures in Aims 1 &
2a. This proposal is innovative because the study population of older, rural Black South African adults improves
representation of understudied groups in ADRD research; our longitudinal assessments of SES exposures over
14 years improve upon the status quo of SES measured retrospectively or at single points in time; and our
linkage of the HAALSI cohort to a randomized controlled cash transfer trial and data on national social protection
policies allows causal inference about income and ADRD risk. This proposal is a major opportunity for life course
research in a rapidly aging, low-income population that can provide insights into ADRD etiology and strategies
to prevent and/or delay ADRD onset in global low-income settings, where there is little data outside this study.
项目总结
到2050年,75%的阿尔茨海默病和相关痴呆(ADRD)病例将发生在中低收入人群中
像南非农村这样的地区,在ADRD研究中的代表性严重不足。有一个关键的问题
关于社会经济地位(SES)在低收入环境下ADRD病因学中的作用的证据差距,以及SES如何
最有针对性的干预措施可以预防和/或推迟ADRD的发病。我们的长期目标是让
设计性别平等的社会经济干预措施,以预防和/或推迟低收入环境中的ADRD发病。这个
这项建议的目标是确定使用纵向暴露(家庭),SES如何影响ADRD风险
资产、粮食安全和就业)以及随机化和准随机化现金转移风险
随着时间的推移,在南非农村生活的中后期积累起来。我们的中心假设是,更大的累积
暴露在有利的社会经济条件下将预防ADRD,对男性有不同的影响
妇女获得家庭一级的社会经济地位资源,这些资源可能在两性之间不平等地分配。为了测试这一点
中心假设,我们将利用一个独特的机会创建首批纵向数据平台之一
研究ADRD在非洲的风险:我们将把2015-21年间收集的高质量记忆和ADRD结果数据联系起来
具有人口代表性的《非洲的健康和老龄化:对INDEPTH社区的纵向研究》
南非“(HAALSI;N=5059)至2000年以来在《阿金库尔健康》中收集的详细的SES暴露数据
和社会人口监测系统(AHDSS;100%人口覆盖率的人口普查)和HPTN
2011年至2015年向家庭转移现金的068个随机对照试验(N=863个家庭在两个HPTN
068和HAALSI)。这三个数据集可以链接,因为AHDSS人口普查是
HAALSI和HPTN 068;我们在初步数据中确认了连锁的可行性。具体地说,我们的目标是:1)
确定中老年累积家庭资产、就业和粮食安全的作用(2000-13年;
AHDSS)记忆力下降和ADRD风险(2015-21;HAALSI);2)确定是否暴露于现金转移
干预措施通过利用2a)HPTN 068中的随机现金转移影响记忆力下降和ADRD;2b)
扩大南非男子老年养恤金;2c)扩大南非子女抚养金
对于母亲;以及3)确定性别如何改变AIMS 1&中家庭一级SES暴露的影响
2A。这项建议是创新的,因为南非农村老年黑人成年人的研究人群改善了
ADRD研究中研究不足群体的代表性;我们对SES暴露的纵向评估
14年来,回顾或在单个时间点衡量的SES现状有所改善;我们的
HAALSI队列与随机对照现金转移试验和国家社会保护数据的联系
政策允许对收入和ADRD风险进行因果推断。这项提议是人生历程中的一个重大机遇
对快速老龄化的低收入人群进行的研究,可以为ADRD的病因和策略提供见解
预防和/或推迟ADRD在全球低收入环境中的发病,因为除了这项研究之外,这些环境中几乎没有数据。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Lindsay C Kobayashi其他文献
Life course financial mobility and later-life memory function and decline by gender, and race and ethnicity: an intersectional analysis of the US KHANDLE and STAR cohort studies
生命历程中的财务流动性与性别、种族和民族对晚年记忆功能及衰退的影响:对美国 KHANDLE 和 STAR 队列研究的交叉分析
- DOI:
10.1016/s2666-7568(24)00129-6 - 发表时间:
2024-09-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:14.600
- 作者:
Lindsay C Kobayashi;Rachel L Peterson;Xuexin Yu;Justina Avila-Rieger;Priscilla A Amofa-Ho;Clara Vila-Castelar;Erika Meza;C Elizabeth Shaaban;Rachel A Whitmer;Paola Gilsanz;Elizabeth Rose Mayeda - 通讯作者:
Elizabeth Rose Mayeda
Lindsay C Kobayashi的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Lindsay C Kobayashi', 18)}}的其他基金
Cumulative socioeconomic exposures, cash transfer interventions, and later-life cognitive decline and dementia risk in a low-income region of South Africa
南非低收入地区的累积社会经济风险、现金转移干预以及晚年认知能力下降和痴呆风险
- 批准号:
10630254 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
Cumulative socioeconomic exposures, cash transfer interventions, and later-life cognitive decline and dementia risk in a low-income region of South Africa
南非低收入地区的累积社会经济风险、现金转移干预以及晚年认知能力下降和痴呆风险
- 批准号:
10260553 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
Cumulative socioeconomic exposures, cash transfer interventions, and later-life cognitive decline and dementia risk in a low-income region of South Africa
南非低收入地区的累积社会经济风险、现金转移干预以及晚年认知能力下降和痴呆风险
- 批准号:
10426336 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
Education and cancer-related cognitive decline during aging
衰老过程中教育与癌症相关的认知能力下降
- 批准号:
10023175 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
Education and cancer-related cognitive decline during aging
衰老过程中教育与癌症相关的认知能力下降
- 批准号:
9805882 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
Interdisciplinary Research Training on Health and Aging
健康与老龄化跨学科研究培训
- 批准号:
10627972 - 财政年份:2008
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
Interdisciplinary Research Training on Health and Aging
健康与老龄化跨学科研究培训
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10407493 - 财政年份:2008
- 资助金额:
$ 58.62万 - 项目类别:
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