Working in Older Age Supports Better Cognition
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A study of elderly Italian adults shows that actively working is a good predictor of participants' cognitive health.
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Higher education and more complex occupations protected people from the risk of cognitive aging.
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The results demonstrate cognitive benefits promoted by lifelong learning and that social connection, ongoing sense of purpose, and ability to function independently largely affect cognitive health and general well-being with age.
This article was posted on EurekAlert.org: [may be edited for content or length]
A recent study shows that work plays an active role in keeping our brains healthy. "We have demonstrated the role of working activity on cognitive performance". Professor Raffaella Rumiati says. "Many studies have been focused on the factors influencing our brain aging and differences in [cognition] have been often observed in association with education or other related to quality of life. From our analysis it emerges that the type of work activity also contributes to the differences in normal and pathological cognitive aging”.
The analysis: resistant and declining brains
The research, carried out by a team of scientists from the University of Padua (Dip. FISPPA), SISSA – Scuola Internazionale di Studi Superiori Avanzati and IRCSS San Camillo Hospital in Venice, quantified the relative contribution of demographic factors (age and sex), comorbidity, education and occupation to the so-called cognitive reserve, that is brain's resistance to a damage caused by illness or aging. Participants were assessed with a series of neuropsychological tests and subsequently divided into three types of profiles based on the results: subjects at risk of cognitive decline, subjects with mild decline and subjects with severe decline.
The tests were repeated twice a few years apart. Depending on whether they maintained or worsened their profile based on their initial performance, participants were classified as "resistant" or "declining".
Education and occupation to stay young
The analysis surprisingly shows that occupation is a good predictor of participants' performance in addition to age and education, two factors that have been already studied.
Professor Sara Mondini of the University of Padua says: "We confirmed that education protect people from the risk of cognitive decline and that these individuals had held more complex occupations than the individuals of the other two groups, the subjects with mild and advanced cognitive decline. Furthermore, the study showed how "resistant" group has on average higher levels of education and more complex jobs than the "declining" group.
The results demonstrate benefits of cognitive mobilization promoted by lifelong learning and that social connection, ongoing sense of purpose and ability to function independently largely affect cognitive health and general well-being along the trajectories of aging.
JOURNAL
European Journal of Neurology