Akushevich Igor, Kravchenko Julia, Yashkin Arseniy, Doraiswamy P Murali, Hill Carl V
Social Science Research Institute Biodemography of Aging Research Unit Duke University Durham North Carolina USA.
Duke University School of Medicine Department of Surgery Durham North Carolina USA.
Alzheimers Dement (Amst). 2023 Mar 16;15(1):e12415. doi: 10.1002/dad2.12415. eCollection 2023 Jan-Mar.
Topics discussed at the "" workshop, held by Duke University and the Alzheimer's Association with support from the National Institute on Aging, are summarized. Ways in which existing data resources paired with innovative applications of both novel and well-known methodologies can be used to identify the effects of multi-level societal, community, and individual determinants of race/ethnicity, sex, and geography-related health disparities in Alzheimer's disease and related dementia are proposed. Current literature on the population analyses of these health disparities is summarized with a focus on identifying existing gaps in knowledge, and ways to mitigate these gaps using data/method combinations are discussed at the workshop. Substantive and methodological directions of future research capable of advancing health disparities research related to aging are formulated.
本文总结了由杜克大学和阿尔茨海默病协会在国立衰老研究所的支持下举办的“”研讨会所讨论的主题。提出了如何将现有数据资源与新颖及知名方法的创新应用相结合,以识别种族/民族、性别和地理相关健康差异的多层次社会、社区和个体决定因素对阿尔茨海默病及相关痴呆症的影响。本文总结了当前关于这些健康差异的人群分析的文献,重点是识别现有知识差距,并在研讨会上讨论了利用数据/方法组合来弥合这些差距的方法。制定了能够推进与衰老相关的健康差异研究的未来研究的实质性和方法性方向。