# Social and Multi-Morbidity Profiles of Older Persons With Dementia

**Authors:** Amy Byers, Yixia Li, Ruth Morin, Daniel Jimenez, Lisa Barry

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2582 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study identifies distinct health and social risk profiles among older adults with dementia, revealing differences across racial and ethnic groups.

## Contribution

The study introduces new insights into the heterogeneity of dementia profiles and their association with race/ethnicity.

## Key findings

- Three distinct multi-morbidity profiles were identified among persons with dementia.
- Three social risk clusters were found, with notable differences across racial/ethnic groups.
- Non-Hispanic Black and Multiracial PWD showed unique patterns in comorbidities and social risks.

## Abstract

Despite tremendous growth in the number of persons with dementia (PWD), little is known about the distinct social and multi-morbidity profiles that characterize PWD and whether they differ by race/ethnicity. We conducted a latent class analysis examining 653,832 PWD age ≥50 years using Medicare and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Health Administration data from January 1, 2012, to December 31, 2020. We triangulated multiple sources of data (e.g., geocode, health factors, VA’s Homeless Operations Management System) to identify distinct typologies of social risk and multi-morbidity. We found three distinct latent clusters defining multi-morbidity: (1) “Minimal Comorbidity” (49.6%); (2) “High Medical-Cardiac” (28.3%); (3) “Medical-High Depression/Sleep Disorder” (22.1%). We also found three clusters for social risk: (1) “Low-Moderate Social Risk” (92.1%); (2) “High Social Risk-Low Social Support/Housing Instability” (2.6%); and (3) “High Social Risk-Alcohol Abuse/Tobacco Dependence” (5.3%). These three-cluster multi-morbidity and social risk profiles differed by racial/ethnic groups. Notably, Non-Hispanic Black PWD had prominent diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (over 50%) in multi-morbidity class 3, and additionally high drug abuse (over 60%) in social risk class 3. While Multiracial PWD had higher overall social risk, including high financial strain (over 60%) in social risk class 2, and Hispanic PWD had lower medical concerns in multi-morbidity class 3 but higher cardiac concerns in class 2. Establishing social and multi-morbidity profiles of PWD quantifies heterogeneity in this highly vulnerable population. These findings may help inform a more personalized, effective, and equitable approach to dementia care and provide opportunities to tailor intervention/prevention.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627), posttraumatic stress disorder (MONDO:0005146)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760932