4.6 Article

Neighborhood disadvantage is associated with stable deficits in neurocognitive functioning in traumatically-injured adults

Journal

HEALTH & PLACE
Volume 67, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2020.102493

Keywords

Stress; PTSD/Posttraumatic stress disorder; Life events/stress; Assessment/diagnosis; Hierarchical linear modeling

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Mental Health [R01 MH106574]
  2. Medical College of Wisconsin CTSI grant
  3. Medical College of Wisconsin Injury Research Center
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health [2UL1TR001436, 2TL1TR001437]

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Neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage is significantly associated with lower neurocognitive functioning in trauma-exposed adults, with stable effects across time in most domains. Area-level variables may underlie individual vulnerability to developing psychiatric disorders.
Background: In trauma-exposed adults, the relationship between an individual's socioeconomic position (SEP) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been well demonstrated. One potential mechanism by which the stress associated with lower SEPs may impact trauma outcomes is through changes in neurocognition. In both healthy and clinical samples, area-level factors also appear to be independently related to neurocognition. Far less is known about how neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage, may impact cognition in traumatically-injured adults. The current study employed hierarchical linear modeling to longitudinally investigate whether neighborhood disadvantage was associated with neurocognitive functioning in five domains: processing speed, sustained attention, controlled attention, cognitive flexibility, and response inhibition. Methods: One-hundred and ninety-five socioeconomically diverse traumatically-injured subjects (mean age = 32.8, 52.8% female) were recruited from an Emergency Department. Two-weeks, three-months, and six-months post-trauma, participants completed self-report measures and a computerized test battery to evaluate neumcognition. An Area Deprivation Index (ADI) score, a measure of a neighborhood's socioeconomic disadvantage, was derived from each participants' home address. Results: Greater neighborhood disadvantage was significantly related to lower scores in all domains. Results of hierarchical linear models revealed neighborhood disadvantage was significantly associated with processing speed, controlled attention, cognitive flexibility, and response inhibition across time, even after adjusting for individual annual household income, baseline PTSD symptoms, and previous adverse life experiences. This relationship was stable for all domains except sustained attention, which varied across time. Conclusion: These findings indicate neighborhood disadvantage contributes uniquely to neurocognitive functioning and, for the majority of domains, these contributions are stable across time. The relationship between area-level variables and cognitive function may underlie individual vulnerability to developing psychiatric disorders. Future work should continue to examine the interaction between socioenvimnmental stressors and PTSD symptoms longitudinally.

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