scholarly journals Childhood socio-economic circumstances, cognitive function and education and later-life economic activity: linking the Scottish Mental Survey 1947 to administrative data

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-79
Author(s):  
Matthew H. Iveson ◽  
Chris Dibben ◽  
Ian J. Deary

As the population ages, older adults are expected to work for longer into the life course. However, older adults experience particular problems staying economically active, even prior to reaching statutory retirement. Recent work has suggested that economic activity in midlife can be predicted by the far-reaching effects of early life, such as childhood socio-economic circumstances, cognitive ability and education. The present study investigates whether these same early-life factors predict the odds of being economically active much later in life, from age 55 to age 75. We capitalise on data linkage conducted between a subsample of the Scottish Mental Survey 1947 cohort and the Scottish Longitudinal Study, which includes three waves of national census data (1991, 2001 and 2011). The structural association between early-life factors and later-life economic activity was assessed using latent growth curve analyses conducted for males and females separately. In both males and females, the odds of being economically active decreased non-linearly across the 20-year follow-up period. For males, greater odds of being economically active at age 55 were predicted by higher childhood cognitive ability and higher educational attainment. For females, greater odds of being economically active at age 55 were predicted by higher childhood socio-economic status and higher childhood cognitive ability. In contrast, early-life factors did not predict the odds of becoming inactive over the 20-year follow-up period. We suggest that early-life advantage may contribute to the capacity for work in later life, but that it does not necessarily protect from subsequent decline in this capacity.

Author(s):  
Drew Altschul ◽  
Matthew Iveson ◽  
Ian Deary

Background In ageing populations it is increasingly important to understand what contributes to health and wellbeing in later life. Older adults in particular are prone to function-limiting health issues which impair their ability to be productive and live independently. The incidence of stroke – one of the most common morbidities among older adults – has been shown to be predicted by early-life cognitive ability, such that those with higher cognitive ability are at lower risk. However, less is known about the role that early-life cognitive ability plays in recovery from stroke. Aim Investigate the association between early-life circumstances, particularly cognitive ability, and later-life recovery from stroke. Methods Using a large sample of individuals born in Scotland in 1936, historic data from the Scottish Mental Survey 1947 will be linked to administrative and healthcare records from across the life course. Incidence of stroke can be identified using healthcare records prior to 2011, and later functional outcomes will be extracted from the Scottish Stroke Care Audit and from Scottish Censuses 2001 and 2011. Analysis Multiple regression models will be used to examine associations between early-life variables and changes in post-morbid general health and physical function among those experiencing stroke prior to 2011. Time since morbidity, number of morbidity events prior to follow-up, and severity of morbidity will be included as covariates. Analyses will be stratified by type of stroke to account for heterogeneity in aetiology, and recovery profiles will be compared between different types of stroke where possible.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-180
Author(s):  
Matthew H. Iveson ◽  
Chris Dibben ◽  
Ian J. Deary

Older adults are particularly prone to function-limiting health issues that adversely affect their well-being. Previous work has identified factors from across the life course –childhood socio-economic status, childhood cognitive ability and education – that predict later-life functional outcomes. However, the independence of these contributions is unclear as later-in-the-life-course predictors are themselves affected by earlier ones. The present study capitalised on the recent linkage of the Scottish Mental Survey 1947 with the Scottish Longitudinal Study, using path analyses to examine the direct and indirect associations between life-course predictors and the risk of functional limitation at ages 55 (N = 2,374), 65 (N = 1,971) and 75 (N = 1,534). The odds of reporting a function-limiting long-term condition increased across later life. At age 55, reporting a functional limitation was significantly less likely in those with higher childhood socio-economic status, higher childhood cognitive ability and higher educational attainment; these associations were only partly mediated by other predictors. At age 65, adult socio-economic status emerged as a mediator of several associations, although direct associations with childhood socio-economic status and childhood cognitive ability were still observed. At age 75, only childhood socio-economic status and adult socio-economic status directly predicted the risk of a functional limitation, particularly those associated with disease or illness. A consistent pattern and direction of associations was observed with self-rated health more generally. These results demonstrate that early-life and adult circumstances are associated with functional limitations later in life, but that these associations are partly a product of complex mediation between life-course factors.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 438-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathew A. Harris ◽  
Caroline E. Brett ◽  
John M. Starr ◽  
Ian J. Deary ◽  
Wendy Johnson

Recent observations that personality traits are related to later–life health and wellbeing have inspired considerable interest in exploring the mechanisms involved. Other factors, such as cognitive ability and education, also show longitudinal influences on health and wellbeing, but it is not yet clear how all these early–life factors together contribute to later–life health and wellbeing. In this preliminary study, we assessed hypothesised relations among these variables across the life course, using structural equation modelling in a sample assessed on dependability (a personality trait related to conscientiousness) in childhood, cognitive ability and social class in childhood and older age, education, and health and subjective wellbeing in older age. Our models indicated that both health and subjective wellbeing in older age were influenced by childhood IQ and social class, via education. Some older–age personality traits mediated the effects of early–life variables, on subjective wellbeing in particular, but childhood dependability did not show significant associations. Our results therefore did not provide evidence that childhood dependability promotes older–age health and wellbeing, but did highlight the importance of other early–life factors, particularly characteristics that contribute to educational attainment. Further, personality in later life may mediate the effects of early–life factors on health and subjective wellbeing. © 2016 The Authors. European Journal of Personality published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Association of Personality Psychology


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Agne Laucyte-Cibulskiene ◽  
Shantanu Sharma ◽  
Peter M Nilsson ◽  
Anders Christensson

Abstract Background and Aims Renal functional capacity is influenced by factors acting early in life, such as intrauterine environment, maturity, birth weight, length at birth, placental weight etc. Early life factors are responsible for the number of nephrons a person starts life with, and the consequence of a low nephron number is earlier kidney ageing and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Notably, most reports addressing early life factors in the context of adult kidney function use creatinine-based eGFR equations and/or albuminuria and lack longer follow-up (<30 years). Therefore, we aimed to identify early life factors associated with kidney function, determined by different creatinine and cystatin C equations and urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR), more than 40 years later. Method 94 women and 494 men, born 1923-50, who participated in The Malmo Diet and Cancer (MDC) study were analyzed. Perinatal data records including birth weight (BW), birth length, head circumference, gestational age, placenta weight (PW) and mother related risk factors were collected from hospital and regional state archives. After a follow-up of 46 to 67 years study subjects underwent physical examination, blood pressure measurements and estimation of glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) using 4 different equations: Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) 2012 creatinine and cystatin C formula (CKD-EPI_creatinine, CKD-EPI_cystatin C), cystatin C eGFR equation based on Caucasian, Asian, pediatric, and adult cohorts (CAPA), the Lund-Malmö revised creatinine based eGFR equation (LM_rev). Urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) was measured in morning urine samples, albuminuria was defined as UACR ⩾3 mg/mmol. Birth weight z-scores (gender specific BWz and combined BWz) acquired by using the equation as reported by Marsal et al.(1996). Four growth mismatch phenotypes defined by combining low or high BW z-score (lowBWz or hiBWz respectively) with lower or higher body mass index at 20 years of age (lowBMI20 ir hiBMI20 respectively). Results Linear regression analysis of early life factors indicated that in females birth weight was positively associated with kidney function measured by both CAPA and CKD-EPI_cystatin C. In the whole population, birth weight adjusted for gestational age and sex, together with prematurity were independently associated to CKD-EPI_cystatin C, while BW/PW ratio was related to LM_rev. Logistic regression analysis showed that only gender specific BWz and combined BWz shared the same odds ratios for age and pulse pressure adjusted albuminuria in males (OR 0,75 (95%CI [0,58; 0,96]). While analyzing postnatal growth mismatch we found that females with hiBWz/lowBMI20 phenotype had significantly worse kidney function acquired by both cystatin C equations compared to those with lowBWz/lowBMI20 phenotype (p=0.044 for CAPA, p=0.040 for CKD-EPI_cystatin C). The logistic regression analysis revealed that hiBWz/hiBMI20 phenotype was related to lower risk of age and pulse pressure adjusted albuminuria (OR 0,35 (95%CI[0,12;0,93]) Conclusion Here we report that lower birth weight in females is associated with worse kidney function determined by cystatin C eGFR equations, while in males lower birth weight z-score is a risk factor for albuminuria in adulthood. Postnatal growth catch-up is not related to worse kidney function. We identified the protective phenotype (hiBWz/hiBMI20) for albuminuria in males and the unfavorable phenotype (hiBWz/lowBMI20) for kidney function in females. This suggests that lower birth weight and postnatal growth curve have a potential sex specific effect to kidney function and development of CKD in middle-aged Swedish subjects. Further studies are warranted to address early life factor prognostic accuracy in kidney function and outcomes prediction later in the lifetime.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (8) ◽  
pp. 1282-1306
Author(s):  
Jinyu Liu ◽  
Lydia Li ◽  
Zhenmei Zhang ◽  
Hongwei Xu

Objectives: This study aimed to examine whether gender and marital status of coresiding adult children are associated with depressive symptoms of Chinese older adults. Methods: Using data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, linear regression analysis was conducted to identify longitudinal associations of intergenerational coresidence with depressive symptoms in rural and urban older Chinese. Results: Both rural and urban older adults living with unmarried sons had significantly higher depressive symptoms at four-year follow-up than those who did not live with children. Living with married sons was significantly associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms at four-year follow-up among rural elders only. Discussion: This study sheds light on the heterogeneity in the relationship between intergenerational coresidence and Chinese older adults’ psychological well-being by the gender and marital status of coresiding children. Further research is needed to understand the complex and dynamic household structures and health outcomes in later life.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S594-S594
Author(s):  
Marnin J Heisel

Abstract Older adults have the highest rates of suicide globally, necessitating theory and research investigating suicide and its prevention in later-life. The experience of loneliness is significantly associated with depression, hopelessness, negative health outcomes, and mortality among older adults. Yet, relatively little research has focused on the role of loneliness in conferring suicide risk in later life. The purpose of the present study was thus to investigate the potential associations between loneliness and suicide ideation and behavior in a sample of community-residing older adults recruited into a larger two-year longitudinal study of psychological risk and resiliency to later-life suicide ideation. We specifically recruited 173 adults, 65 years or older, from community locations in a medium-sized Canadian city, for a study on “healthy aging.” Participants completed measures of positive and negative psychological variables, including depression, loneliness, and suicide ideation at a baseline assessment, and again at 2-4 week, 6-12 month, and 1-2 year follow-up points. Findings indicated that loneliness (UCLA Loneliness Scale) was significantly positively associated with concurrent depression and suicide ideation, negatively associated with psychological well-being and perceived social support, and differentiated between participants who endorsed or denied having ever engaged in suicide behavior. Baseline loneliness also explained significant variability in the onset of suicide ideation over a 1-2 year period of follow-up, controlling for age, sex, and baseline depression and suicide ideation. These findings will be discussed in the context of the need for increased focus on psychosocial factors when assessing and intervening to reduce suicide risk in older adults.


Neurology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (23) ◽  
pp. e2144-e2156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kirsty Lu ◽  
Jennifer M. Nicholas ◽  
Jessica D. Collins ◽  
Sarah-Naomi James ◽  
Thomas D. Parker ◽  
...  

ObjectiveTo investigate predictors of performance on a range of cognitive measures including the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC) and test for associations between cognition and dementia biomarkers in Insight 46, a substudy of the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development.MethodsA total of 502 individuals born in the same week in 1946 underwent cognitive assessment at age 69–71 years, including an adapted version of the PACC and a test of nonverbal reasoning. Performance was characterized with respect to sex, childhood cognitive ability, education, and socioeconomic position (SEP). In a subsample of 406 cognitively normal participants, associations were investigated between cognition and β-amyloid (Aβ) positivity (determined from Aβ-PET imaging), whole brain volumes, white matter hyperintensity volumes (WMHV), and APOE ε4.ResultsChildhood cognitive ability was strongly associated with cognitive scores including the PACC more than 60 years later, and there were independent effects of education and SEP. Sex differences were observed on every PACC subtest. In cognitively normal participants, Aβ positivity and WMHV were independently associated with lower PACC scores, and Aβ positivity was associated with poorer nonverbal reasoning. Aβ positivity and WMHV were not associated with sex, childhood cognitive ability, education, or SEP. Normative data for 339 cognitively normal Aβ-negative participants are provided.ConclusionsThis study adds to emerging evidence that subtle cognitive differences associated with Aβ deposition are detectable in older adults, at an age when dementia prevalence is very low. The independent associations of childhood cognitive ability, education, and SEP with cognitive performance at age 70 have implications for interpretation of cognitive data in later life.


Author(s):  
Steven A. Haas ◽  
Zhangjun Zhou ◽  
Katsuya Oi

Social gradients in health have been a focus of research for decades. Two important lines of social gradient research have examined (1) international variation in their magnitude and (2) their life course / developmental antecedents. The present study brings these two strands together to explore the developmental origins of educational gradients in health. We leverage data spanning 14 high-income contexts from the Health and Retirement Study and its sisters in Europe. We find that early-life health and socio-economic status consistently attenuate educational gradients in multimorbidity and functional limitation. However, the relative contribution of early-life factors to gradients varies substantially across contexts. The results suggest that research on social gradients, and population health broadly, would benefit from the unique insights available from a conceptual and empirical approach that integrates comparative and life course perspectives.<br /><br />Key messages<br /><ul><li>The magnitude of educational gradients in later life health depend, in part, on childhood health and socioeconomic circumstances.</li><br /><li>The role of early life factors in educational gradients in health varies substantially across high income contexts.</li></ul>


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