Education as protector against dementia, but what exactly do we mean by education?

Abstract:

OBJECTIVES: even though a great number of research studies have shown that high education has protective effects against dementia, some studies did not observe such a significant effect. In that respect, the aim of our study was to investigate and compare various operationalisation approaches of education and how they impact dementia risk within one sample. METHODS: data were derived from the Leipzig longitudinal study of the aged (LEILA75+). Individuals aged 75 and older underwent six cognitive assessments at an interval of 1.5 years and a final follow-up 15 years after the baseline assessment. We operationalised education according to different approaches used in previous studies and analysed the impact on dementia incidence via multivariate cox regression modelling. RESULTS: the results showed that whether education is identified as significant protector against dementia strongly depends on the operationalisation of education. Whereas the pure number of years of education showed statistically significant protective effects on dementia risk, other more complex categorical classification approaches did not. Moreover, completing >10 years of education or a tertiary level seems to be an important threshold to significantly reduce dementia risk. CONCLUSION: findings suggest a protective effect of more years of education on a lower dementia risk with a particular critical threshold of completing >10 years of education. Further, the findings highlight that, when examining risks and protective factors of dementia, a careful consideration of the underlying definitions and operationalisation approaches is required.

PubMed ID: 27055879

Projects: LIFE Adult

Publication type: Journal article

Journal: Age Ageing

Human Diseases: Dementia

Citation: Age Ageing. 2016 Jul;45(4):523-8. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afw049. Epub 2016 Apr 7.

Date Published: 9th Apr 2016

Registered Mode: by PubMed ID

Authors: F. S. Then, T. Luck, M. C. Angermeyer, S. G. Riedel-Heller

Help
help Submitter
Activity

Views: 3612

Created: 13th May 2019 at 09:08

Last updated: 7th Dec 2021 at 17:58

help Attributions

None

Related items

Powered by
(v.1.13.0-master)
Copyright © 2008 - 2021 The University of Manchester and HITS gGmbH
Institute for Medical Informatics, Statistics and Epidemiology, University of Leipzig

By continuing to use this site you agree to the use of cookies