Neighborhood Cohesion, Loneliness, and Cognitive Function: Effects of Race and Place
Jeffrey Stokes, Kenzie Latham-Mintus, Heather Farmer, Setarreh Massizhadegan

TL;DR
This study explores how neighborhood social cohesion affects loneliness and cognitive function differently across racial groups in older adults.
Contribution
The study reveals that neighborhood social cohesion reduces loneliness and improves cognitive function only among non-Hispanic White adults.
Findings
Non-Hispanic White adults reported higher neighborhood cohesion, lower loneliness, and better cognitive function.
Neighborhood cohesion reduced loneliness only among non-Hispanic White participants.
Loneliness was linked to cognitive decline across all groups, but cognitive benefits of cohesion were seen only in non-Hispanic Whites.
Abstract
Racial/ethnic disparities in cognition and dementia are well-established. Social determinants of health researchers have identified neighborhood context as one potential contributor to these disparities, though to date most research has focused on neighborhood built environment and objective neighborhood characteristics (e.g., neighborhood SES, racial/ethnic demographics). More recently, research on “cognability” has identified neighborhood social context as an important determinant of both well-being and cognitive health among the aging population. Neighborhood social cohesion, in particular, may help to reduce loneliness and thereby improve cognitive aging among midlife and older adults. However, access to high-quality and cohesive neighborhood settings varies by race/ethnicity in the U.S., as too may the association of neighborhood social cohesion with well-being outcomes such as…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
