Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia: A Nationwide Register-Based Study

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Standard

Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia : A Nationwide Register-Based Study. / Appel, Andreas M; Brønnum-Hansen, Henrik; Garde, Anne H; Hansen, Åse Marie; Ishtiak-Ahmed, Kazi; Islamoska, Sabrina; Mortensen, Erik L; Osler, Merete; Nabe-Nielsen, Kirsten.

I: Journal of Aging and Health, Bind 34, Nr. 2, 2022, s. 184-195.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Appel, AM, Brønnum-Hansen, H, Garde, AH, Hansen, ÅM, Ishtiak-Ahmed, K, Islamoska, S, Mortensen, EL, Osler, M & Nabe-Nielsen, K 2022, 'Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia: A Nationwide Register-Based Study', Journal of Aging and Health, bind 34, nr. 2, s. 184-195. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643211037200

APA

Appel, A. M., Brønnum-Hansen, H., Garde, A. H., Hansen, Å. M., Ishtiak-Ahmed, K., Islamoska, S., Mortensen, E. L., Osler, M., & Nabe-Nielsen, K. (2022). Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia: A Nationwide Register-Based Study. Journal of Aging and Health, 34(2), 184-195. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643211037200

Vancouver

Appel AM, Brønnum-Hansen H, Garde AH, Hansen ÅM, Ishtiak-Ahmed K, Islamoska S o.a. Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia: A Nationwide Register-Based Study. Journal of Aging and Health. 2022;34(2):184-195. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643211037200

Author

Appel, Andreas M ; Brønnum-Hansen, Henrik ; Garde, Anne H ; Hansen, Åse Marie ; Ishtiak-Ahmed, Kazi ; Islamoska, Sabrina ; Mortensen, Erik L ; Osler, Merete ; Nabe-Nielsen, Kirsten. / Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia : A Nationwide Register-Based Study. I: Journal of Aging and Health. 2022 ; Bind 34, Nr. 2. s. 184-195.

Bibtex

@article{af21d76d168649d1ad767b55aec106ef,
title = "Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia: A Nationwide Register-Based Study",
abstract = "OBJECTIVES: Previous research on the association between socioeconomic position (SEP) and dementia has not sufficiently accounted for the complex relationship between education and occupation. We investigated the independent and joint effects of educational attainment and occupation-based SEP on dementia.METHODS: We used register-based information about educational attainment, occupation-based SEP, and dementia from 1,210,720 individuals. Information about cognitive ability at conscription was available for a subsample of men.RESULTS: When mutually adjusted, lower educational attainment and occupation-based SEP were associated with higher dementia risk in a dose-response manner. Higher occupation-based SEP partly mitigated the higher dementia risk associated with lower educational attainment. After adjusting for cognitive ability in a subgroup of men, only unskilled work was associated with higher dementia risk.DISCUSSION: Occupation-based SEP is independently associated with dementia and may mitigate the higher dementia risk associated with short education. Future research should elucidate the mechanisms underlying social inequality in dementia.",
author = "Appel, {Andreas M} and Henrik Br{\o}nnum-Hansen and Garde, {Anne H} and Hansen, {{\AA}se Marie} and Kazi Ishtiak-Ahmed and Sabrina Islamoska and Mortensen, {Erik L} and Merete Osler and Kirsten Nabe-Nielsen",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1177/08982643211037200",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "184--195",
journal = "Journal of Aging and Health",
issn = "0898-2643",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Socioeconomic Position and Late-Onset Dementia

T2 - A Nationwide Register-Based Study

AU - Appel, Andreas M

AU - Brønnum-Hansen, Henrik

AU - Garde, Anne H

AU - Hansen, Åse Marie

AU - Ishtiak-Ahmed, Kazi

AU - Islamoska, Sabrina

AU - Mortensen, Erik L

AU - Osler, Merete

AU - Nabe-Nielsen, Kirsten

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - OBJECTIVES: Previous research on the association between socioeconomic position (SEP) and dementia has not sufficiently accounted for the complex relationship between education and occupation. We investigated the independent and joint effects of educational attainment and occupation-based SEP on dementia.METHODS: We used register-based information about educational attainment, occupation-based SEP, and dementia from 1,210,720 individuals. Information about cognitive ability at conscription was available for a subsample of men.RESULTS: When mutually adjusted, lower educational attainment and occupation-based SEP were associated with higher dementia risk in a dose-response manner. Higher occupation-based SEP partly mitigated the higher dementia risk associated with lower educational attainment. After adjusting for cognitive ability in a subgroup of men, only unskilled work was associated with higher dementia risk.DISCUSSION: Occupation-based SEP is independently associated with dementia and may mitigate the higher dementia risk associated with short education. Future research should elucidate the mechanisms underlying social inequality in dementia.

AB - OBJECTIVES: Previous research on the association between socioeconomic position (SEP) and dementia has not sufficiently accounted for the complex relationship between education and occupation. We investigated the independent and joint effects of educational attainment and occupation-based SEP on dementia.METHODS: We used register-based information about educational attainment, occupation-based SEP, and dementia from 1,210,720 individuals. Information about cognitive ability at conscription was available for a subsample of men.RESULTS: When mutually adjusted, lower educational attainment and occupation-based SEP were associated with higher dementia risk in a dose-response manner. Higher occupation-based SEP partly mitigated the higher dementia risk associated with lower educational attainment. After adjusting for cognitive ability in a subgroup of men, only unskilled work was associated with higher dementia risk.DISCUSSION: Occupation-based SEP is independently associated with dementia and may mitigate the higher dementia risk associated with short education. Future research should elucidate the mechanisms underlying social inequality in dementia.

U2 - 10.1177/08982643211037200

DO - 10.1177/08982643211037200

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34388948

VL - 34

SP - 184

EP - 195

JO - Journal of Aging and Health

JF - Journal of Aging and Health

SN - 0898-2643

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 276268719