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Background: Psychological distress has been linked with later cognitive impairment and dementia, although the nature of the association remains unclear. Using a multi-cohort approach, we examined longitudinal associations of psychological distress with subsequent cognition and dementia, testing whether findings varied by age of assessment, severity, and persistence of psychological distress.
Methods: We used five longitudinal studies: Caerphilly Prospective Study, English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, National Child Development Study, National Survey of Health and Development, and Whitehall II. We examined associations with changes in cognition using linear and mixed effects models, and dementia using logistic regression. Results were pooled using two-stage individual participant data meta-analysis.
Findings: Pooled analyses (total N=24,564) showed that greater psychological distress was associated with lower subsequent cognitive level (β=-0.03 [95% CI: -0.06; -0.01]; I2=69.7%). Associations were present for clinically-significant (β=-0.06 [-0.12; -0.00]; I2=62.2%), persistent (β=-0.12 [-0.23; -0.02]; I2=82.5%) and intermittent distress (β=-0.09 [-0.12; -0.05]; I2=0%). Baseline distress was not associated with rates of subsequent cognitive decline. Psychological distress was associated with subsequent dementia (OR=1.12 [1.04; 1.20]; I2=0%), including for clinically-significant (OR=1.28 [1.07; 1.52; I2=0%]), persistent (OR=1.43 [1.04; 1.98]; I2=44.0%) and intermittent symptoms (OR=1.32 [1.02; 1.71]; I2=40.3%). Dementia was associated with psychological distress assessed in later life (age 65-75 OR: 1.29 [1.18; 1.40]; I2=13.9%), but not mid-life (age 45-54 OR: 1.09 [0.93; 1.28]; I2=34.0%).
Interpretation: In this multi-cohort study, psychological distress was associated with subsequent dementia and lower subsequent cognitive level, including for both persistent and intermittent distress. Associations with dementia were present when distress was assessed at older ages but not at ages 45-54 years, suggesting that associations might partly represent early preclinical markers of dementia neuropathology. Findings highlight the potential relevance of psychological distress in informing dementia prevention and supporting identification of high-risk groups, both of which are major global public health priorities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.08.19.25333919 | DOI Listing |
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September 2025
Gender Studies Programme, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
Engaging in the gay community provides support and affirmation, but it is often overlooked that some sexual minority men may experience stress from status-based competition within the mainstream gay community. These pressures are more prevalent among sexual minority men with lower social and sexual status, who are frequently devalued and excluded by other members of the community. Such experiences can be more psychologically impactful than rejection by mainstream society.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Sci Med
September 2025
Indiana University, Department of Sociology, 1020 E. Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, IN, 47405, USA.
COVID-19 unleashed a bereavement crisis on a scale unseen in over a century. While evidence suggests COVID-19 deaths are acutely damaging to well-being, it is unclear how multiple losses affect mental health, whether there are ethnoracial differences in cumulative loss, or if the association between multiple COVID-related deaths and psychological distress varies by race-ethnicity. Using national survey data (n = 1810) collected following the Omicron surge in the United States, we estimate a series of regression models to assess the association between multiple COVID-19 losses and psychological distress, racial-ethnic differences in aggregate death exposure, and differential vulnerability to multiple losses across racial-ethnic groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Relig Health
September 2025
Center for Climate Action and Social Transformations (4CAST) Institute of Psychology, SWPS University, Warsaw, Poland.
The present study examined responses to COVID-19 at the beginning of the pandemic, April 2020, among a representative sample of 880 Poles. Participants described their religious beliefs, their emotional reactions to the pandemic, the changes they had made in their behavior since the onset of the pandemic, and their political orientation (left-right). Roman Catholics felt more threatened by the pandemic than non-believers, and Catholics reacted more strongly to the pandemic than non-believers in terms of feeling scared, paralyzed by fear, panicked, fearful, sad, woebegone, and lost, whereas there were no such differences on other emotional reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Infirm
September 2025
Faculté des sciences infirmières, Pavillon Ferdinand-Vandry, local 3463, Université Laval, Québec, G1V 0A6, Canada. Electronic address:
While we work with patients when they are victims of an adverse event in their care, we too often ignore the fact that the caregiver also experiences the consequences of this event. Some of these events lengthen hospital stays, aggravate health problems and can even lead to death. For the caregivers involved, as well as for the health-care teams, the effects are far from negligible in terms of affect and psychological suffering.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Affect Disord
September 2025
Department of Psychology, College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Koç University, Istanbul, Türkiye.
Background: Refugees face psychosocial challenges after resettling in host nations, including experienced stigma and microaggressions. Microaggressions are subtle/ambiguous discriminatory remarks or behaviors. There is a dearth of research and instruments examining microaggressions refugees face.
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