3.8 Article

Socioeconomic Disparities and Gender Inequalities in Dementia: a Community-Dwelling Population Study from a Middle-Income Country

Journal

JOURNAL OF CROSS-CULTURAL GERONTOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 105-118

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10823-020-09418-4

Keywords

Colombia; Dementia; Gender-based; Gender disparity; Latin America; Socioeconomic disparity

Categories

Funding

  1. Administrative Department of Science, Technology and Innovation in Colombia [Colciencias] [12035431692]
  2. Pontificia Universidad Javeriana

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The study estimates the prevalence of dementia in a community-dwelling population in Colombia and finds that factors such as age, cardiovascular risks, and socioeconomic disparities contribute to higher odds of dementia. The research supports the cognitive reserve hypothesis on dementia and indicates that women in Latin America are more likely to be affected by socioeconomic disparities that limit their cognitive reserve.
The proportion of the world's older adults and of its dementia cases is increasing in low and middle-income countries. This is particularly true in Colombia. There, the number of individuals with dementia may increase five-fold by 2050. Yet research is lacking on dementia in such settings. This work estimates the prevalence of dementia in a community-dwelling population in Colombia. It also assesses how gender-based differences in cardiovascular conditions and socioeconomic disparities affect dementia. This work analyzes data on 2000 respondents at least 60 years of age in the Health, Well-Being, And Aging (SABE) study in Bogota. Respondents with dementia are those who have cognitive impairment and at least two limitations in instrumental activities of daily living. The SABE study finds 8.4% of respondents have dementia. Age, cardiovascular risks, and socioeconomic disparities contributed to higher odds of dementia. The contributors to dementia can differ for men and women. For example, socioeconomic disparities were a larger contributor to dementia for women than men. The findings support the cognitive reserve hypothesis on dementia. This holds that pre-existing cognitive processes and compensatory mechanisms influence dementia. Women in Latin America are more likely to suffer from socioeconomic disparities that limit their cognitive reserve. This research points to several policy implications that can help offset these disparities and reduce the prevalence of dementia.

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