4.8 Article

Predicting mortality from 57 economic, behavioral, social, and psychological factors

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1918455117

关键词

mortality; transdisciplinary; social; behavioral; data-driven

资金

  1. National Institute on Aging (NIA) [U01 AG009740]
  2. Social Security Administration
  3. NIA [P01-AG020166, R01-AG019239]
  4. John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Successful Midlife Development
  5. Canada Research Chairs program
  6. Population Research Training Grant (NIH) [T32 HD007242]
  7. National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health [R24AG048024, K01AG047280]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Behavioral and social scientists have identified many nonbiological predictors of mortality. An important limitation of much of this research, however, is that risk factors are not studied in comparison with one another or from across different fields of research. It therefore remains unclear which factors should be prioritized for interventions and policy to reduce mortality risk. In the current investigation, we compare 57 factors within a multidisciplinary framework. These include (i) adverse socioeconomic and psychosocial experiences during child-hood and (ii) socioeconomic conditions, (iii ) health behaviors, (iv) social connections, (v) psychological characteristics, and (vi) adverse experi-ences during adulthood. The current prospective cohort investigation with 13,611 adults from 52 to 104 y of age (mean age 69.3 y) from the nationally representative Health and Retirement Study used weighted traditional (i.e., multivariate Cox regressions) and machine-learning (i.e., lasso, random forest analysis) statistical approaches to identify the leading predictors of mortality over 6 y of follow-up time. We demonstrate that, in addition to the well-established behavioral risk factors of smoking, alcohol abuse, and lack of physical activity, eco-nomic (e.g., recent financial difficulties, unemployment history), social (e.g., childhood adversity, divorce history), and psychological (e.g., neg-ative affectivity) factors were also among the strongest predictors of mortality among older American adults. The strength of these predic-tors should be used to guide future transdisciplinary investigations and intervention studies across the fields of epidemiology, psychology, so-ciology, economics, and medicine to understand how changes in these factors alter individual mortality risk.

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