Causal Thinking and Trauma Determine Dementia Prevention Behaviors in Indigenous and Non-Indigenous Older Adults
Jose Aravena, Moises Sandoval, Javiera Provis, Carolina Herrera, Karen Wang, Cecilia Albala, Becca Levy

TL;DR
The study finds that how people think about causes of dementia and their trauma experiences influence dementia prevention behaviors differently in Indigenous and non-Indigenous older adults in Chile.
Contribution
It identifies trauma-related causal beliefs as a culturally specific barrier to dementia prevention among Indigenous populations.
Findings
Internal causal thinking about memory problems and AD is linked to better dementia prevention behaviors overall.
Mapuche participants were more likely to associate trauma with cognitive problems, which was linked to more dementia risk factors.
The association between causal thinking and prevention behaviors differed by Indigenous status and specific cognitive condition.
Abstract
Indigenous groups in high-income countries experience a higher risk of dementia than non-Indigenous populations. Internal causal thinking (attributing chronic diseases to factors within the individual) has been linked to healthier behaviors, but its role in cognitive health, and how trauma perceptions shape preventive behaviors, remains unclear. We investigated whether causal thinking about cognitive problems and the identification of traumatic experiences as a cause influence engagement in dementia prevention behaviors among Indigenous and non-Indigenous older adults in Chile. In a sequential mixed-method study, Mapuche (n = 167) and non-Indigenous (n = 245) adults aged ≥60 years completed open-ended questions to classify internal versus external causal thinking toward memory problems and Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and whether trauma was perceived as a cause. Dementia prevention…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Child Abuse and Trauma · Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights
