Secondhand Smoke Exposure and Cognitive Function in U.S. Never-Smoking Older Adults
Sophie Zhijing Xu, Jinyu Hu, Jackie Finik, Ruotong Liu, Yaguang Zheng, Bei Wu

TL;DR
This study finds that moderate secondhand smoke exposure is linked to worse cognitive performance in older adults who have never smoked.
Contribution
The novel contribution is identifying cognitive risks from moderate secondhand smoke exposure in never-smokers.
Findings
Moderate SHS exposure was significantly associated with lower immediate and delayed recall scores.
Moderate SHS exposure also reduced DSST and Global Cognitive Scores in never-smoking older adults.
Low and high SHS exposure groups showed no significant cognitive associations.
Abstract
While active smoking is a known risk factor for cognitive decline, the impact of secondhand smoke (SHS) on cognitive function in never-smoking adults remains understudied. This study examines the association between SHS exposure and cognitive function in U.S. never-smoking older adults using data from 615 individuals aged 60+ from the NHANES 2011–2014. SHS exposure was measured via serum cotinine levels and categorized as low (0.01–0.02 ng/mL), moderate (0.02–0.04 ng/mL), and high (≥0.04 ng/mL), with never-smokers defined as those reporting fewer than 100 lifetime cigarettes. Cognitive function was assessed using the CERAD-WL immediate and delayed recall, Animal Fluency Test, Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST), and Global Cognitive Score. Multivariable regression models adjusted for demographic, lifestyle, and socioeconomic factors. The mean age was highest in the unexposed group…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors Study · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
