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Midlife Residential Greenness and Late-Life Cognitive Decline among Nurses’ Health Study Participants

Marcia Pescador Jimenez, Maude Wagner, Francine Laden, Jaime E. Hart, Francine Grodstein, Peter James

2024Environmental Health Perspectives12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Midlife residential exposure to greenspace may slow cognitive decline by increasing opportunities for physical activity and social connection, restoring attention, or reducing stress or adverse environmental exposures. However, prospective studies on the association between greenness and cognitive decline are sparse. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the prospective association between greenness at midlife and cognitive decline later in life. We explored effect measure modification by apolipoprotein E (APOE)-ɛ4 carrier status, neighborhood socioeconomic status (NSES), and rural/urban regions. METHODS: -scores for each task to evaluate overall cognition. We used linear mixed models to evaluate the association of average greenness exposure at midlife with cognitive decline in later life, adjusted for age, education, NSES, and depression. RESULTS: months. In analysis exploring gene-environment interactions, we found that among APOE-ɛ4 carriers, an IQR increase in greenness was associated with a rate of decline that was slower by 0.01 units of global composite score (95% CI: 0.0004, 0.02). This association was attenuated among APOE-ɛ4 noncarriers. We did not observe associations between greenness and baseline or annual rate of cognitive decline of verbal memory. DISCUSSION: Higher midlife greenness exposure is associated with slower cognitive decline later in life. Future research is necessary to confirm these findings. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP13588.

Topics & Concepts

Cognitive declineGerontologyCognitionEnvironmental healthMedicineDemographyPsychologyDementiaDiseasePsychiatryPathologySociologyUrban Green Space and HealthPlace Attachment and Urban Studies
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