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Social stress and risk of declining cognition: a longitudinal study of men and women in the United States

  • Abstract Limited research is available on the relationship between social stress and risk of declining cognition. We sought to examine whether social stress has adverse effects on risk of declining episodic memory and executive functioning in aging individuals. We used data from the MIDUS study, a national probability sample of non-institutionalized, English speaking respondents aged 25–74 living in the 48 contiguous states of the United States. The initial wave (1995) included 4963 non-institutionalized adults aged 32–84 (M = 55, SD = 12.4). We used an analytic sample from MIDUS-II (1996/1997) and MIDUS-III (2013) (n = 1821). The dependent variables are episodic memory and executive functioning, which were assessed with the Brief Test for Cognition (BTACT). The independent variables were social stress variables (subjective social status, family and marital stress, work stress and discrimination). To evaluate episodic memory and executive functioning changes over a time period of 10 years, we estimated adjusted linear regression models. Women report significantly lower subjective social status and more discrimination stress than men across all age groups. Controlling for education and income, age, and baseline episodic memory and executive functioning, lower subjective social status had additional adverse effects on declines in episodic memory in men and women. Marital risk had adverse effects on episodic memory in men but not in women. Daily discrimination had adverse effects on executive functioning on all individuals. Public health strategies should focus on reducing social stress in a socio-ecological perspective. Especially, subjective social status and discrimination stress might be a target for prevention efforts.

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Metadaten
Author:Jutta LindertORCiD, Kimberley C. Paul, E. Lachman Margie, Beate Ritz, Teresa Seeman
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-021-02089-7
ISSN:0933-7954
Parent Title (English):Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
Publisher:Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Year of Completion:2021
Release Date:2025/03/11
Tag:Discrimination; Episodic Memory; Executive Functioning; Social Stress; Subjective Social Status
Volume:57
Pagenumber:10
First Page:1875
Last Page:1884
Institute:Fachbereich Soziale Arbeit und Gesundheit
Research Focus Area:Ressourcenorientierung im Spannungsfeld von Individuum und Gesellschaft (ROSIG)