3.8 Article

Associations Between Country where Education is Obtained and Cognitive Functioning Among South American and Caribbean Older Adults Living in the U.S

Journal

JOURNAL OF CROSS-CULTURAL GERONTOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 257-274

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10823-022-09456-0

Keywords

Education; Cross-cultural neuropsychology; Hispanic older adults; Alzheimer's disease; Mild Cognitive Impairment

Categories

Funding

  1. NIA, NIH, Bathesda, MD [P50AG047266, UFDSP00011790]
  2. Florida Department of Health [20A13, AG060524]
  3. NSF [1920182, L60AG069322-02]
  4. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr
  5. Division Of Computer and Network Systems [1920182] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study examined cognitive functioning among older Hispanic adults living in the U.S., and found differences in cognitive performance between regions and diagnostic groups. Significant relationships were found between education country and cognitive functioning for South Americans, but not for Caribbean individuals. This is the first study to explore the impact of education source on cognitive functioning for individuals from different Spanish-speaking regions.
The increasing prevalence of AD among Hispanics calls for a need for examining factors that affect cognitive functioning and risk of AD among Hispanic older adults. The current study examined cognitive functioning among older Hispanic adults living in the U.S. from two Hispanic regions, South America and the Caribbean, in relation to the country where education was obtained. Participants (n = 139) were stratified into groups based on Hispanic education region and diagnostic categories: cognitively normal and amnestic MCI (aMCI). Results of Pearson correlations showed that among Hispanic Americans in general, there were significant positive correlations between the country of education to performance on measures of episodic, verbal, and word list tests. When examined separately by region and diagnosis, only cognitively normal (CN) South Americans showed significant relationships between country of education and cognitive functioning in these areas. Results of general linear models controlling for education identified differences in neuropsychological performance between groups with the CN groups demonstrating better performance than the aMCI groups within each region. Overall, it was evident that relationships between years of education obtained outside of the U.S. and cognitive functioning were not similar among individuals from these two disparate Spanish speaking regions. This is the first study to examine the country where education was obtained among individuals from countries located in different regions with different cultures that may influence their education and cognitive development throughout life. Findings contribute to the cross-cultural neuropsychological literature in understanding factors that are unique to Hispanic older adults at risk for developing AD.

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