Content area
Background
Loneliness is a risk factor for late-life dementia. There is less consistent evidence of its association with cognitive performance. This study examined the replicability of the association between loneliness and overall and domain-specific cognitive function and informant-rated cognitive decline in cohorts from seven countries: the United States, England, India, China, South Africa, Mexico, and Chile.
Methods
Data were from the Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol administered in seven population-based studies (total N > 20,000). Participants reported their loneliness, completed a battery of cognitive tests, and nominated a knowledgeable informant to rate their cognitive decline. Random-effect meta-analyses were used to summarize the associations from each cohort.
Results
Loneliness was associated with poor overall cognitive performance and informant-rated cognitive decline controlling for sociodemographic factors (meta-analytic correlation for overall cognition = −.10 [95% CI = −.13, −.06] and informant-rated decline = .16 [95% CI = .14, .17]). Despite some heterogeneity, the associations were significant across samples from Africa, Asia, Europe, North, Central, and South America. The meta-analysis also indicated an association with specific cognitive domains: episodic memory, speed-attention, visuospatial abilities, numeric reasoning, and verbal fluency. The associations were attenuated but persisted when depressive symptoms were added as a covariate. Depression, cognitive impairment, and sociodemographic factors did not consistently moderate the associations across samples.
Conclusions
Loneliness is associated with poor performance across multiple domains of cognition and observer-rated cognitive decline, associations that replicated across diverse world regions and cultures.
Details
Episodic memory;
Visual perception;
Memory;
Respondents;
Fluency;
Loneliness;
Older people;
Ethnicity;
Cognitive ability;
Dementia;
Longitudinal studies;
Marital status;
Cognitive impairment;
Mental depression;
Age;
Meta-analysis;
Spatial memory;
Aging;
Dementia disorders;
Sociodemographics;
Risk factors;
Females;
Ratings & rankings;
Population studies;
Visual memory;
Visual-Spatial ability;
Cognition & reasoning;
Cultural differences;
Cognition;
Adults
; Sutin, Angelina R 2
; Hajek, André 3
; Karakose, Selin 4
; Aschwanden, Damaris 5
; Páraic S O’Súilleabháin 6
; Stephan, Yannick 7
; Terracciano, Antonio 4
; Luchetti, Martina 2
1 Department of Human Development and Community Health, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA
2 Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, College of Medicine, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
3 Department of Health Economics and Health Services Research, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany
4 Department of Geriatrics, College of Medicine, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA
5 Department of Geriatrics, College of Medicine, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA; Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Gerontology and Vulnerability, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
6 Department of Psychology, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
7 EuroMov, University of Montpellier, Montpellier, France