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Volunteering in older adulthood is associated with activity engagement and cognitive functioning

Hayley Guiney, Michael Keall, Liana Machado

2020Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Introduction: Given evidence that activity engagement in older adulthood can have protective effects on the aging brain, we investigated the idea that volunteering in the community, which often encompasses social, cognitive, and physical activity, might benefit cognition.Method: Ninety-one retired 65- to 75-year-olds reported their sociodemographic characteristics, wellbeing, volunteering, and activity engagement. They also completed computerized cognitive tests that tapped specific functions known to decline disproportionately with age.Results: Volunteering at least monthly was associated with better working memory and more social and cognitive activity. Mediation analyses indicated that volunteering was indirectly related to switching performance via cognitive activity. However, the volunteering-working memory association did not depend on activity engagement, leaving the underpinning mechanisms unclear.Conclusions: These findings provide new insight into positive associations between older people’s volunteering, activity engagement, and cognitive functioning. However, further work is needed to understand the mechanisms that drive volunteering-cognition links, and to establish causality.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyDevelopmental psychologyCognitionCognitive skillGerontologyMedicinePsychiatryStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryAging and Gerontology ResearchHealth disparities and outcomes
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