A Proactive Health Behavior Framework for Cognitive Impairment in Chinese Older Adults: Based on a Four-Factor and Logistic Regression Analysis
Shengjiang Wang, Hailun Liang

TL;DR
This study identifies psychological-social support and health information access as key factors in reducing cognitive impairment risk in older Chinese adults.
Contribution
The paper introduces a four-factor framework for proactive health behaviors and empirically validates their impact on cognitive impairment risk.
Findings
Psychological-social support and information-behavior execution significantly reduce cognitive impairment risk by 39% and 53%, respectively.
Age increases the risk of cognitive impairment by 21.7% for every 5-year increment.
Salt restriction and vaccination behaviors differ significantly between low-risk and high-risk groups.
Abstract
What are the main findings? Psychological–social support and information-behavior execution are major protective factors against screening positivity on the AD8 Dementia Screening Interview (AD8) among Chinese older adults; each one-standard-deviation increase reduces screening-positive risk by 39% and 53%, respectively;Age significantly increases cognitive impairment risk (21.7% per 5-year increment). Psychological–social support and information-behavior execution are major protective factors against screening positivity on the AD8 Dementia Screening Interview (AD8) among Chinese older adults; each one-standard-deviation increase reduces screening-positive risk by 39% and 53%, respectively; Age significantly increases cognitive impairment risk (21.7% per 5-year increment). What are the implications of the main findings? Strengthening psychological support and optimizing health…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Sodium Intake and Health · Biochemical effects in animals
