Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities

Abstract Background Aboriginal Australians are disproportionately affected by dementia compared to other Australians and many populations globally. Dementia incidence and risk factors have not been identified for Aboriginal Australians living in urban or regional areas (comprising ∼80% of First Nati...

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Published in:Alzheimer's & Dementia
Main Authors: Lavrencic, Louise, Donovan, Terrence, Moffatt, Lindy, Allan, Wendy, Daylight, Gail, Garvey, Gail, Hill, Thi Yen, Draper, Brian, Cumming, Robert, Broe, Gerald A, Delbaere, Kim, Radford, Kylie
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/alz.041446
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/alz.041446
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spelling crwiley:10.1002/alz.041446 2024-06-02T08:06:47+00:00 Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities Dementia care research (research projects; nonpharmacological)/Cross‐cultural studies and cultural/linguistic adaptations Lavrencic, Louise Donovan, Terrence Moffatt, Lindy Allan, Wendy Daylight, Gail Garvey, Gail Hill, Thi Yen Draper, Brian Cumming, Robert Broe, Gerald A Delbaere, Kim Radford, Kylie 2020 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/alz.041446 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/alz.041446 en eng Wiley http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor Alzheimer's & Dementia volume 16, issue S7 ISSN 1552-5260 1552-5279 journal-article 2020 crwiley https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.041446 2024-05-03T11:25:50Z Abstract Background Aboriginal Australians are disproportionately affected by dementia compared to other Australians and many populations globally. Dementia incidence and risk factors have not been identified for Aboriginal Australians living in urban or regional areas (comprising ∼80% of First Nations Australians). There is also a pressing need in this population for non‐pharmacological interventions that are culturally‐grounded and target dementia risk‐reduction. Psychological wellbeing is a risk factor for dementia, and is relevant for Aboriginal communities where there are high levels of exposure to stress and trauma. Method The Koori Growing Old Well Study (KGOWS) is a longitudinal, population‐based study with Aboriginal Australians aged 60+ years; participants were from 5 partnering communities in New South Wales (N=336 at baseline; n=165 at follow‐up; n=68 died before follow‐up; mean follow‐up=6 years). Biomedical and psychosocial risk factors (baseline assessment) were examined for cognitive decline (incident MCI or dementia) using logistic regression. To address the impact of lifecourse stress and trauma on dementia risk, a comprehensive co‐design process was employed to develop the Ngarraanga Giinganay (‘thinking peacefully’) mindfulness‐based program, including expert working group, community focus group and pilot trial (n=7 older Aboriginal Australians), with quantitative and qualitative outcomes. Result KGOWS demonstrated high rates of incident dementia (17.55/1000 person‐years; age‐standardised rate=34.71) and cognitive decline (42.34/1000 person‐years; age‐standardised rate=73.51), comparable to a remote Aboriginal population. In models adjusted for age (OR=2.12), factors predicting cognitive decline included male sex (OR=2.91), lower education (OR=0.51), moderate to severe hearing (OR=4.80) and vision (OR=3.78) problems, greater waist‐hip ratio (OR=1.56), polypharmacy (OR=2.61) and unskilled work history (OR=5.27). The working group and focus group feedback strongly guided Ngarraanga Giinganay ... Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations Wiley Online Library Alzheimer's & Dementia 16 S7
institution Open Polar
collection Wiley Online Library
op_collection_id crwiley
language English
description Abstract Background Aboriginal Australians are disproportionately affected by dementia compared to other Australians and many populations globally. Dementia incidence and risk factors have not been identified for Aboriginal Australians living in urban or regional areas (comprising ∼80% of First Nations Australians). There is also a pressing need in this population for non‐pharmacological interventions that are culturally‐grounded and target dementia risk‐reduction. Psychological wellbeing is a risk factor for dementia, and is relevant for Aboriginal communities where there are high levels of exposure to stress and trauma. Method The Koori Growing Old Well Study (KGOWS) is a longitudinal, population‐based study with Aboriginal Australians aged 60+ years; participants were from 5 partnering communities in New South Wales (N=336 at baseline; n=165 at follow‐up; n=68 died before follow‐up; mean follow‐up=6 years). Biomedical and psychosocial risk factors (baseline assessment) were examined for cognitive decline (incident MCI or dementia) using logistic regression. To address the impact of lifecourse stress and trauma on dementia risk, a comprehensive co‐design process was employed to develop the Ngarraanga Giinganay (‘thinking peacefully’) mindfulness‐based program, including expert working group, community focus group and pilot trial (n=7 older Aboriginal Australians), with quantitative and qualitative outcomes. Result KGOWS demonstrated high rates of incident dementia (17.55/1000 person‐years; age‐standardised rate=34.71) and cognitive decline (42.34/1000 person‐years; age‐standardised rate=73.51), comparable to a remote Aboriginal population. In models adjusted for age (OR=2.12), factors predicting cognitive decline included male sex (OR=2.91), lower education (OR=0.51), moderate to severe hearing (OR=4.80) and vision (OR=3.78) problems, greater waist‐hip ratio (OR=1.56), polypharmacy (OR=2.61) and unskilled work history (OR=5.27). The working group and focus group feedback strongly guided Ngarraanga Giinganay ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lavrencic, Louise
Donovan, Terrence
Moffatt, Lindy
Allan, Wendy
Daylight, Gail
Garvey, Gail
Hill, Thi Yen
Draper, Brian
Cumming, Robert
Broe, Gerald A
Delbaere, Kim
Radford, Kylie
spellingShingle Lavrencic, Louise
Donovan, Terrence
Moffatt, Lindy
Allan, Wendy
Daylight, Gail
Garvey, Gail
Hill, Thi Yen
Draper, Brian
Cumming, Robert
Broe, Gerald A
Delbaere, Kim
Radford, Kylie
Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities
author_facet Lavrencic, Louise
Donovan, Terrence
Moffatt, Lindy
Allan, Wendy
Daylight, Gail
Garvey, Gail
Hill, Thi Yen
Draper, Brian
Cumming, Robert
Broe, Gerald A
Delbaere, Kim
Radford, Kylie
author_sort Lavrencic, Louise
title Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities
title_short Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities
title_full Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities
title_fullStr Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities
title_full_unstemmed Identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional Aboriginal Australian communities
title_sort identifying dementia risk factors and implementing a culturally grounded risk‐reduction intervention in urban and regional aboriginal australian communities
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2020
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/alz.041446
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/alz.041446
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Alzheimer's & Dementia
volume 16, issue S7
ISSN 1552-5260 1552-5279
op_rights http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.041446
container_title Alzheimer's & Dementia
container_volume 16
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