Publication: Intellectual and physical activities, but not social activities, are associated with better global cognition: A multi-site evaluation of the cognition and lifestyle activity study for seniors in Asia (CLASSA)
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Issued Date
2015-09-01
Resource Type
ISSN
14682834
00020729
00020729
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-84940668811
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Age and Ageing. Vol.44, No.5 (2015), 835-840
Suggested Citation
Linda C.W. Lam, Paulus Anam Ong, Yustiani Dikot, Yulia Sofiatin, Huali Wang, Mei Zhao, Wenxiu Li, Jacqueline Dominguez, Boots Natividad, Suraya Yusoff, Jong Ling Fu, Vorapun Senanarong, Ada W.T. Fung, Ken Lai Intellectual and physical activities, but not social activities, are associated with better global cognition: A multi-site evaluation of the cognition and lifestyle activity study for seniors in Asia (CLASSA). Age and Ageing. Vol.44, No.5 (2015), 835-840. doi:10.1093/ageing/afv099 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/35391
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Title
Intellectual and physical activities, but not social activities, are associated with better global cognition: A multi-site evaluation of the cognition and lifestyle activity study for seniors in Asia (CLASSA)
Abstract
© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. Background: population ageing will lead to a leap in the dementia population in Asia. However, information about potentials for low-cost and low-risk interventions is limited. Objectives: to study the associations between lifestyle activities and global cognition from the Cognitive and Lifestyle Activity Study for Seniors in Asia (CLASSA). Design: a cross-sectional study. Methodology: we studied the association between global cognition and lifestyle activity participation in community living older adults (60 years or over) across nine sites in East Asia. A standardised lifestyle activity questionnaire exploring activities from four categories (intellectual, physical, social and recreational) was used to measure the pattern. Global cognition was categorised by locally validated versions of Mini-mental state examination (MMSE) or Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) (good cognition, GC-scored at the top 25% among participants with no significant cognitive deficit (SCD); normal cognition, NC-middle 50% among participants with no SCD; mild cognitive deficit, MCD-lowest 25% among participants with no SCD; SCD-below local cut-offs for dementia). Results: two thousand four hundred and four (1,009 men; 1,395 women) participants were recruited. The mean age was 71.0 (7.2) years. A higher variety of intellectual and physical activities were associated with GC; more social activities were associated with higher risks of having impaired cognition (multinomial logistic regression). The same association was found in participants with no SCD and had regular activities for over 10 years (n = 574). Conclusion: intellectual activity and physical exercise were associated with better cognitive states in Asian older adults. Community-based intervention may take considerations into specific types of activities to optimise cognition.
