Litcius/Paper detail

Association between socioeconomic status and cognitive functioning among older adults in Ghana

Jonathan Aseye Nutakor, Baozhen Dai, Jianzai Zhou, Ebenezer Larnyo, Alexander Kwame Gavu, Maxwell Kwabena Asare

2020International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry42 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Extensive analysis of the associations between socioeconomic status and cognition has been conducted among older adults. However, it is not clear whether associations in high-income countries are similar in low-and middle-income countries. This research aims to investigate the association between the socioeconomic status of older adults in Ghana and their cognitive function by using a sample of older adults that is nationally representative. METHODS: Data were obtained from a sample of older Ghanaian adults (50+) from the Study of Global AGEing and Adult Health Wave 1 (n = 3710) of the World Health Organization. Objectively, cognition was measured by verbal recall, verbal fluency, forward digit span, and backward digit span, while variations in cognition overall were evaluated against socioeconomic factors using linear regression. RESULTS: Older age, older women, rural life, increasing memory difficulty, and being diagnosed with stroke were the most significant determinants of impaired cognitive function. Higher education and higher income were significantly associated with a better cognitive function than those with no formal education and low income. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide new evidence for public health programs in Ghana and other low-and middle-income countries to tackle cognitive impairments in growing populations.

Topics & Concepts

Socioeconomic statusVerbal fluency testMemory spanCognitionGerontologyPsychologyHealth and Retirement StudyRecallVerbal memoryPublic healthMedicineEnvironmental healthPopulationNeuropsychologyWorking memoryPsychiatryCognitive psychologyNursingDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchHealth disparities and outcomesCognitive Abilities and Testing
Association between socioeconomic status and cognitive functioning among older adults in Ghana | Litcius