Pain, Physical Activity, and Subjective Memory Complaints: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study
Chang Pu Liang, Wuyi Dong, Yan-Jhu Su

TL;DR
This study explores how physical activity, pain, and memory complaints are related in older adults, finding that these associations are influenced by health and depression.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into how pain and physical activity relate to memory complaints, highlighting mediating factors like self-rated health and depression.
Findings
The associations between pain and physical activity with memory complaints were significant before adjusting for covariates.
After controlling for covariates, neither pain nor physical activity significantly predicted memory complaints.
Pain did not moderate the relationship between physical activity and memory complaints.
Abstract
This study investigates the intricate relationships between physical activity, pain, and subjective memory complaints (SMCs) among older adults using data from the 2020 Health and Retirement Study. The primary aims were to examine the association between physical activity and SMCs, evaluate the independent contribution of pain to SMCs, and explore the potential moderating role of pain in the relationship between physical activity and SMCs. Results from linear regression models indicated that the associations of pain and physical activity with SMCs were significant in unadjusted analyses but became non-significant after controlling for covariates, suggesting that self-rated health and depression may mediate these relationships. Stratified analyses further confirmed these findings, showing that physical activity did not significantly predict SMCs in either pain-stratified group.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Sport Psychology and Performance · Traumatic Brain Injury Research
