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The Moderating Role of Dementia-Related Fear in the Relationship Between Perceived Cognitive Decline and Motivation for Dementia Risk Reduction Behaviors in Community-Dwelling Middle-Aged and Older Adults. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

Objective: With the increasing incidence of dementia, lifestyle interventions are key for long-term risk reduction. Understanding the psychological factors affecting lifestyle change motivation is crucial to developing effective policy strategies for dementia risk reduction. This study explores the moderating role of dementia-related fear on the relationship between perceived cognitive decline and engagement in dementia risk reduction behaviors.

Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 200 Chinese community-dwelling middle-aged and older adults. Hierarchical regression and simple slope analysis were used to assess the moderating effect of dementia-related fear on the relationship between perceived cognitive decline and motivation to engage in dementia risk reduction behaviors.

Results: A significant correlation was found between perceived cognitive decline and increased motivation to engage in dementia risk reduction behaviors (r = 0.44). Dementia-related fear acted as a significant moderator; motivation was positively associated with low to moderate levels of fear, whereas this association diminished and became non-significant at higher levels of fear.

Conclusions: The findings suggest that while lower levels of dementia-related fear may be linked to increased motivation for engaging in risk reduction behaviors, elevated levels of fear do not appear to support such engagement. Rather than emphasizing the negative impacts of dementia, public health strategies should empower individuals with actionable messages to engage in dementia risk reduction behaviors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gps.70130DOI Listing

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