Public Health Reviews (Mar 2024)

Systematic Review of Longitudinal Evidence and Methodologies for Research on Neighborhood Characteristics and Brain Health

  • Yvonne L. Michael,
  • Araliya M. Senerat,
  • Araliya M. Senerat,
  • Channa Buxbaum,
  • Ugonwa Ezeanyagu,
  • Timothy M. Hughes,
  • Kathleen M. Hayden,
  • Julia Langmuir,
  • Lilah M. Besser,
  • Brisa Sánchez,
  • Jana A. Hirsch,
  • Jana A. Hirsch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/phrs.2024.1606677
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45

Abstract

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Objective: Synthesize longitudinal research evaluating neighborhood environments and cognition to identify methodological approaches, findings, and gaps.Methods: Included studies evaluated associations between neighborhood and cognition longitudinally among adults >45 years (or mean age of 65 years) living in developed nations. We extracted data on sample characteristics, exposures, outcomes, methods, overall findings, and assessment of disparities.Results: Forty studies met our inclusion criteria. Most (65%) measured exposure only once and a majority focused on green space and/or blue space (water), neighborhood socioeconomic status, and recreation/physical activity facilities. Similarly, over half studied incident impairment, cognitive function or decline (70%), with one examining MRI (2.5%) or Alzheimer’s disease (7.5%). While most studies used repeated measures analysis to evaluate changes in the brain health outcome (51%), many studies did not account for any type of correlation within neighborhoods (35%). Less than half evaluated effect modification by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and/or sex/gender. Evidence was mixed and dependent on exposure or outcome assessed.Conclusion: Although longitudinal research evaluating neighborhood and cognitive decline has expanded, gaps remain in types of exposures, outcomes, analytic approaches, and sample diversity.

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