• Title of article

    Cognition and mortality from the major causes of death: the Health and Lifestyle Survey

  • Author/Authors

    Shipley، نويسنده , , Beverly A. and Der، نويسنده , , Geoff D. Taylor، نويسنده , , Michelle D. and Deary، نويسنده , , Ian J.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    143
  • To page
    152
  • Abstract
    Objective estigate the influence of reaction time and cognition on the risk of death from cause-specific mortality and to examine whether any association found remains after adjustment for available socioeconomic, lifestyle, and health factors. s ipants were from the UK Health and Lifestyle Survey. The sample consisted of 6424 community dwelling individuals aged between 18 and 97 years at baseline (1984/1985). Sociodemographic, lifestyle, health, and physiological information was collected alongside cognitive testing which included simple (SRT) and choice (CRT) reaction time, a short-term memory test, and a test of visual–spatial reasoning. Participants have been followed for 21 years for cause-specific mortality. s and more variable reaction times and poorer cognitive performance were associated with a higher risk of death from cardiovascular disease, stroke, and respiratory disease after controlling for age and sex. Slight attenuation was noted after adjustments for all covariates. However, only CRT mean remained significantly associated with death from respiratory disease. No associations were found for coronary heart disease, lung cancer, and all nonlung cancers. Significant cognition–mortality associations were mostly obtained in those aged over 60 years. The possibility of reverse causality was partly excluded by reanalysing the data after omitting individuals who died within 5 years of cognitive testing. sions and more variable reaction times and poorer cognitive performance were related to an increased risk of mortality from cardiovascular disease, stroke, and respiratory disease. The possibility of reverse causality requires further testing.
  • Keywords
    Cognition , Cause-specific mortality , Information-processing speed , Social Class
  • Journal title
    Journal of Psychosomatic Research
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of Psychosomatic Research
  • Record number

    1742540