TY - JOUR
T1 - State Schooling Policies and Cognitive Performance Trajectories
T2 - A Natural Experiment in a National US Cohort of Black and White Adults
AU - Kim, Min Hee
AU - Liu, Sze Yan
AU - Brenowitz, Willa D.
AU - Murchland, Audrey R.
AU - Nguyen, Thu T.
AU - Manly, Jennifer J.
AU - Howard, Virginia J.
AU - Thomas, Marilyn D.
AU - Hill-Jarrett, Tanisha
AU - Crowe, Michael
AU - Murchison, Charles F.
AU - Glymour, M. Maria
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Background: Education is strongly associated with cognitive outcomes at older ages, yet the extent to which these associations reflect causal effects remains uncertain due to potential confounding. Methods: Leveraging changes in historical measures of state-level education policies as natural experiments, we estimated the effects of educational attainment on cognitive performance over 10 years in 20,248 non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic White participants, aged 45+ in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Disparities in Stroke (REGARDS) cohort (2003-2020) by (1) using state- and year- specific compulsory schooling laws, school-term length, attendance rate, and student-teacher ratio policies to predict educational attainment for US Census microsample data from 1980 and 1990, and (2) applying policy-predicted years of education (PPYEd) to predict memory, verbal fluency, and a cognitive composite. We estimated overall and race- and sex-specific effects of PPYEd on level and change in each cognitive outcome using random intercept and slope models, adjusting for age, year of first cognitive assessment, and indicators for state of residence at age 6. Results: Each year of PPYEd was associated with higher baseline cognition (0.11 standard deviation [SD] increase in composite measure for each year of PPYEd, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.07, 0.15). Subanalyses focusing on individual cognitive domains estimate the largest effects of PPYEd on memory. PPYEd was not associated with rate of change in cognitive scores. Estimates were similar across Black and White participants and across sex. Conclusions: Historical policies shaping educational attainment are associated with better later life memory, a major determinant of dementia risk.
AB - Background: Education is strongly associated with cognitive outcomes at older ages, yet the extent to which these associations reflect causal effects remains uncertain due to potential confounding. Methods: Leveraging changes in historical measures of state-level education policies as natural experiments, we estimated the effects of educational attainment on cognitive performance over 10 years in 20,248 non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic White participants, aged 45+ in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Disparities in Stroke (REGARDS) cohort (2003-2020) by (1) using state- and year- specific compulsory schooling laws, school-term length, attendance rate, and student-teacher ratio policies to predict educational attainment for US Census microsample data from 1980 and 1990, and (2) applying policy-predicted years of education (PPYEd) to predict memory, verbal fluency, and a cognitive composite. We estimated overall and race- and sex-specific effects of PPYEd on level and change in each cognitive outcome using random intercept and slope models, adjusting for age, year of first cognitive assessment, and indicators for state of residence at age 6. Results: Each year of PPYEd was associated with higher baseline cognition (0.11 standard deviation [SD] increase in composite measure for each year of PPYEd, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.07, 0.15). Subanalyses focusing on individual cognitive domains estimate the largest effects of PPYEd on memory. PPYEd was not associated with rate of change in cognitive scores. Estimates were similar across Black and White participants and across sex. Conclusions: Historical policies shaping educational attainment are associated with better later life memory, a major determinant of dementia risk.
KW - cognition
KW - cognitive aging
KW - education
KW - health disparities
KW - longitudinal analysis
KW - natural experiment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85206689789&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001799
DO - 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001799
M3 - Article
C2 - 39329415
AN - SCOPUS:85206689789
SN - 1044-3983
JO - Epidemiology
JF - Epidemiology
M1 - 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001799
ER -