Cognitive functioning and health as determinants of mortality in an older population.

The authors studied whether the ability of cognitive functioning to predict mortality is pervasive or specific, and they considered the role of health in the cognition-mortality association. Data were taken from a sample of 2,380 persons aged 55-85 years who took part in the Netherlands' Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam in 1992-1993. Five cognitive measures were distinguished: general cognitive functioning, information processing speed, fluid intelligence, learning, and proportion retained. Mortality data were obtained during an average follow-up period of 1,215 days. Cox proportional hazards regression models revealed that all cognitive functions predicted mortality independent of age, sex, education, and depressive symptoms. When health (self-rated health, medication use, physical performance, functional limitations, lung function, specific chronic diseases) was also taken into account, information processing speed, fluid intelligence, and proportion retained remained independent predictors of mortality, whereas the ability of general cognitive functioning and learning to determine mortality was lost. The authors concluded that the ability of cognitive functioning to predict mortality is pervasive to all cognitive functions that were included in the study when age, sex, education, and depressive symptoms are considered and is more specific to some functions when also controlling for health.

[1]  P A Wolf,et al.  Cognitive impairment and mortality: a study of possible confounders. , 1990, American journal of epidemiology.

[2]  J. Smit,et al.  Consequences of major and minor depression in later life: a study of disability, well-being and service utilization , 1997, Psychological Medicine.

[3]  Klaus F. Riegel,et al.  A study of the dropout rates in longitudinal research on aging and the prediction of death. , 1967, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[4]  S. Berg Intelligence and terminal decline , 1987 .

[5]  G. Mcclearn,et al.  Multidimensional Patterns of Aging in 70-Year-Olds , 1996, Journal of aging and health.

[6]  D. Gold,et al.  Self-rated health and mortality in the high-functioning elderly--a closer look at healthy individuals: MacArthur field study of successful aging. , 1994, Journal of gerontology.

[7]  J Ormel,et al.  The assessment of ADL among frail elderly in an interview survey: self-report versus performance-based tests and determinants of discrepancies. , 1996, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[8]  E. Feskens,et al.  Self-rated health, mortality, and chronic diseases in elderly men. The Zutphen Study, 1985-1990. , 1993, American journal of epidemiology.

[9]  S. Berg Aging, behavior and terminal decline , 1996 .

[10]  B Johansson,et al.  The robustness of the terminal decline phenomenon: longitudinal data from the Digit-Span Memory Test. , 1989, Journal of gerontology.

[11]  L W Poon,et al.  Effects of labeling techniques on memory and comprehension of prescription information in young and old adults. , 1990, Journal of gerontology.

[12]  D B Reuben,et al.  An Objective Measure of Physical Function of Elderly Outpatients , 1990, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[13]  J. Lindeboom,et al.  Are age and education independent correlates of the Mini-Mental State Exam performance of community-dwelling elderly? , 1993, Journal of gerontology.

[14]  F. Carp Handbook of the psychology of aging. , 1977 .

[15]  J. Birren Sociopsychologic studies of the aging process. Increments and decrements in the intellectual status of the aged. , 1968, Psychiatric research reports.

[16]  D. Carmelli,et al.  Performance on the digit symbol substitution test and 5-year mortality in the Western Collaborative Group Study. , 1995, American journal of epidemiology.

[17]  A. Beekman,et al.  Autonomy and well-being in the aging population II: Report from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam 1992-1996 , 1998 .

[18]  J. Berg Netherlands health interview survey , 1994 .

[19]  B. Penninx,et al.  Self-reports and general practitioner information on the presence of chronic diseases in community dwelling elderly. A study on the accuracy of patients' self-reports and on determinants of inaccuracy. , 1996, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[20]  T. Tombaugh,et al.  The Mini‐Mental State Examination: A Comprehensive Review , 1992, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[21]  W. R. Cunningham,et al.  Is terminal drop pervasive or specific? , 1988, Journal of gerontology.

[22]  S. Kasl,et al.  Health perceptions and survival: do global evaluations of health status really predict mortality? , 1991, Journal of gerontology.

[23]  P. Rubé,et al.  L’examen Clinique en Psychologie , 1959 .

[24]  Pearl A. Dykstra,et al.  Living arrangements and social networks of older adults , 1996 .

[25]  Birren Je Sociopsychologic studies of the aging process. Increments and decrements in the intellectual status of the aged. , 1968 .

[26]  G. Kennedy,et al.  Cognitive impairment and mortality in older community residents. , 1994, American journal of public health.

[27]  H. Lentzner Autonomy and well-being in the aging population: Concepts and design of the longitudinal aging study Amsterdam: Edited by D. J. H. Deeg, C. P. M. Knipscheer and W. van Tilburg. Institute of Gerontology, The Netherlands, 1993. 303 pp. U.S. $ , 1995 .

[28]  B. Winblad,et al.  Low blood pressure and five-year mortality in a Stockholm cohort of the very old: possible confounding by cognitive impairment and other factors. , 1997, American journal of public health.

[29]  P. Rabbitt,et al.  The course and causes of cognitive change with advancing age , 1991 .

[30]  A. Hofman,et al.  The association between change in cognitive function and longevity in Dutch elderly. , 1990, American journal of epidemiology.

[31]  K. Engedal Mortality in the elderly— A 3‐year follow‐up of an elderly community sample , 1996 .

[32]  J. Liang,et al.  Social networks, social support, and mortality among older people in Japan. , 1994, Journal of gerontology.

[33]  L. Radloff The CES-D Scale , 1977 .

[34]  George A. Kaplan,et al.  Social Functioning and Overall Mortality: Prospective Evidence from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study , 1994, Epidemiology.

[35]  I. Siegler,et al.  Wechsler Memory Scale Scores, selective attrition, and distance from death. , 1982, Journal of gerontology.

[36]  F. Speizer,et al.  Peak expiratory flow rate and 5-year mortality in an elderly population. , 1991, American journal of epidemiology.

[37]  P. Baltes,et al.  Intellectual functioning in old and very old age: cross-sectional results from the Berlin Aging Study. , 1997, Psychology and aging.

[38]  L. Ferrucci,et al.  A short physical performance battery assessing lower extremity function: association with self-reported disability and prediction of mortality and nursing home admission. , 1994, Journal of gerontology.

[39]  S. Folstein,et al.  "Mini-mental state". A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. , 1975, Journal of psychiatric research.

[40]  P. Leaf,et al.  The effects of cognitive impairment on 9-year mortality in a community sample. , 1995, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.