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Longitudinal psychosocial predictors of cognitive function in old adults (CROSBI ID 654405)

Prilog sa skupa u zborniku | sažetak izlaganja sa skupa | međunarodna recenzija

Lučanin, Damir ; Delale, Eva Anđela ; Despot Lučanin, Jasminka ; Košćec Bjelajac, Adrijana ; Štambuk, Marina Longitudinal psychosocial predictors of cognitive function in old adults // Conference Abstracts of the 31st European Health Psychology Society Conference. Padova: European Health Psychology Society, 2017. str. 709-709

Podaci o odgovornosti

Lučanin, Damir ; Delale, Eva Anđela ; Despot Lučanin, Jasminka ; Košćec Bjelajac, Adrijana ; Štambuk, Marina

engleski

Longitudinal psychosocial predictors of cognitive function in old adults

The implications of declining cognitive functioning on old persons’ daily lives are complex and not well understood, despite its importance. Recent longitudinal studies on ageing regard the age changes in cognition as important determinant of adjustment to ageing, quality of life and survival (Allerhand, Gale, and Deary, 2014). Independence in old age is as much determined by cognitive functioning as by physical functioning. Normal cognitive changes are important to understand because they can affect an older adult’s daily functioning and they can help distinguish normal from disease states (Harada, Natelson Love and Triebel, 2013). The aim of this study was to determine the longitudinal predictive contribution of psychosocial factors to the cognitive function in old persons. Participants were 167 retirement homes’ residents in Zagreb, Croatia, followed-up for eight years, assessed at three measurement times: in 2008, 2010 and 2016. Their age was 69-100 years, average 85 years in 2016 (77 years at baseline), 80% were women, ambulatory and not diagnosed with dementia. Variables were cognitive function, functional ability, self-perceived health, social participation, depression, life satisfaction, and sociodemographic. Trained interviewers collected data individually. Different regression analyses models indicated that the observed set of predictors explained 34% - 37% of the cognitive function variance in 2016. The significant longitudinal predictors were baseline cognitive function, social participation, functional ability, and age. Identifying long-term predictors of cognitive changes has implications for the development of prevention strategies and interventions to delay cognitive impairment in old age and improve quality of life.

cognitive function, old adults, psychosocial predictors, longitudinal

Sažetak dostupan na: http://ehps2017.org/wp- content/uploads/EHPS-2017-Abstracts-Booklet.pdf

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Podaci o prilogu

709-709.

2017.

objavljeno

Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji

Conference Abstracts of the 31st European Health Psychology Society Conference

Padova: European Health Psychology Society

Podaci o skupu

31st Conference of the European Health Psychology Society

predavanje

29.08.2017-02.09.2017

Padova, Italija

Povezanost rada

Psihologija