The Mediating Effect of Smoking on the Association between Income and Dementia among Japanese Older People
Satomi Shimada, Yusuke Matsuyama, Katsunori Kondo, Jun Aida

TL;DR
This study finds that smoking partially explains the link between low income and higher dementia risk in older Japanese people, suggesting smoking cessation could reduce dementia inequalities.
Contribution
The study quantifies the mediating role of smoking in the income-dementia relationship in Japan, a novel approach in health inequality research.
Findings
Low income was associated with increased dementia risk, with smoking partially mediating this relationship.
Smoking explained 7.7% of the income-dementia association in overall participants.
Smoking cessation could help reduce health disparities in dementia incidence.
Abstract
Health inequalities in dementia have been reported. Smoking is a risk factor for dementia and is disproportionately distributed in marginalized populations. This study examined the mediating effect of smoking on the association between income and dementia among older Japanese people. This longitudinal study was based on the Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study from 2010 (response rate = 64.3%) to 2019 (follow-up rate = 98.5%). A total of 44,083 participants independent in daily life were analyzed (mean age: 73.7; women 53.2%). The outcome variable was the incidence of dementia between 2010 and 2019, and the explanatory variable was equivalent income measured in 2010. Causal mediation analyses with a Cox proportional hazard model were performed to evaluate the mediating effect of smoking status in 2010. Multiple imputation was performed for the missing data. Among the participants,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition, Health and Food Behavior
