Older African American Women’s Mental Health and Subjective Memory: The Role of Social Determinants of Health
Gail Wallace, Ian McDonough, Roland Thorpe, George Rebok

TL;DR
This study explores how social factors and coping ability influence mental health and memory in older African American women over 10 years.
Contribution
The study reveals how social determinants of health moderate the relationship between coping and mental/cognitive outcomes in older African American women.
Findings
Higher personal control is linked to better subjective memory and fewer depressive symptoms.
Personal control's positive effects on memory are stronger over time.
Social determinants of health moderate these associations.
Abstract
This study examined the role of psychosocial coping ability on depression and subjective memory outcomes moderated by social determinants of health in older African American women in the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly (ACTIVE) study. Path analysis modeling was done using an autoregressive cross-lagged modeling approach on longitudinal data with 607 older African American women (Mean Age = 72.17, 65-91) residing in U.S. cities: Birmingham, Boston, Indianapolis, Baltimore, State College, PA, and Detroit as part of the ACTIVE study. Bidirectional cross-lagged effects modeled from depressive symptoms to subsequent subjective memory and vice versa, at each lagged time interval from baseline to 10 years following baseline was implemented. The social determinants of health (SDH) of study participants were divided into high and low groups via a median split and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Aging and Gerontology Research
