Journal Articles

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/7915

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    Lifestyle for brain health and cognitive functioning in midlife to early late-life New Zealanders: Utility of the LIBRA index.
    (John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2024-05-01) Röhr S; Stephens C; Alpass F
    OBJECTIVES: There is enormous potential to improve brain health and reduce the risk of cognitive decline and dementia based on modifiable risk factors. The Lifestyle for Brain Health (LIBRA) index was developed to quantify modifiable dementia risk or room for brain health improvement. The objective of the study was to investigate the utility of the LIBRA index in relation to cognitive functioning in a midlife to early late-life sample of New Zealanders. METHODS: A subsample (n = 1001) of the longitudinal New Zealand Health, Work and Retirement (NZHWR) study completed face-to-face cognitive assessments using the 'Kiwi' Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-Revised (ACE-R) in 2010 and again in 2012, in addition to completing biennial NZHWR surveys on socioeconomic, health and wellbeing aspects. The LIBRA index was calculated incorporating information on 8 out of 12 modifiable health and lifestyle factors for dementia. Unadjusted and adjusted regression models and mixed effects models were used to inspect associations of LIBRA with cognitive functioning, cognitive impairment, and cognitive decline. RESULTS: The analytical sample (n = 881 [88.0%], after considering exclusion criteria and missing data) had a mean age of 63.1 (SD = 6.5) years, 53.3% were female, 26.2% were Māori, and 61.7% were highly educated. Higher LIBRA scores (indicating higher modifiable dementia risk) were associated with lower cognitive functioning (B = -0.33, 95% CI = -0.52;-0.15, p < 0.001) and a higher likelihood of cognitive impairment (OR = 1.22, 95% CI = 1.04; 1.42, p = 0.013), but did not predict cognitive decline over 2 years (B = -0.03, 95% CI = -0.22; 0.16, p = 0.766), adjusted for age, age2, gender, education, and ethnicity. CONCLUSIONS: The LIBRA index indicated promising utility for quantifying modifiable dementia risk in midlife and early late-life New Zealanders. For local use, refinement of the LIBRA index should consider cultural differences in health and lifestyle risk factors, and further investigate its utility with a wider range of modifiable factors over a longer observation period.
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    Home drinking practices among middle-class adults in midlife during the COVID-19 pandemic: Material ubiquity, automatic routines and embodied states.
    (John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2023-07-01) Lyons AC; Young J; Blake D; Evans P; Stephens C
    INTRODUCTION: Harmful drinking is increasing among mid-life adults. Using social practice theory, this research investigated the knowledge, actions, materials, places and temporalities that comprise home drinking practices among middle-class adults (40-65 years) in Aotearoa New Zealand during 2021-2022 and post the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns. METHODS: Nine friendship groups (N = 45; 26 females, 19 males from various life stages and ethnicities) discussed their drinking practices. A subset of 10 participants (8 female, 2 male) shared digital content (photos, screenshots) about alcohol and drinking over 2 weeks, which they subsequently discussed in an individual interview. Group and interview transcripts were thematically analysed using the digital content to inform the analysis. RESULTS: Three themes were identified around home drinking practices, namely: (i) alcohol objects as everywhere, embedded throughout spaces and places in the home; (ii) drinking practices as habitual, automatic and conditioned to mundane everyday domestic chores, routines and times; and (iii) drinking practices intentionally used by participants to achieve desired embodied states to manage feelings linked to domestic and everyday routines. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Alcohol was normalised and everywhere within the homes of these midlife adults. Alcohol-related objects and products had their own agency, being entangled with domestic routines and activities, affecting drinking in both automatic and intentional ways. Developing alcohol policy that would change its ubiquitous and ordinary status, and the 'automatic' nature of many drinking practices, is needed. This includes restricting marketing and availability to disrupt the acceptability and normalisation of alcohol in the everyday domestic lives of adults at midlife.
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    Older People’s Neighborhood Perceptions Are Related to Social and Emotional Loneliness and Mediated by Social Network Type
    (Oxford University Press, 2022-10-19) Stephens C; Phillips H
    Background and Objectives Loneliness among older people is a public health issue; however, there is very weak support for the efficacy of individually focused interventions. A public health model, which includes the environmental influence on the formation of social networks and protection from loneliness, and theoretical approaches differentiating between social and emotional loneliness, suggest the importance of neighborhoods in preventing loneliness. This approach was used to test the influence of neighborhood factors on loneliness and the mediating role of social networks. Research Design and Methods A questionnaire survey of 917 people aged 60–100 years was conducted in one region of Aotearoa/New Zealand to assess loneliness, social network types, social participation, marital status, gender, health, and four aspects of neighborhood perceptions. Results Social and emotional loneliness scores were regressed on predicted demographic and social variables, followed by perceptions of Housing Satisfaction, Neighborhood Accessibility, Neighborhood Security, and Neighborhood Social Cohesion. Neighborhood variables added significant explanation of variance in both social and emotional loneliness. Mediation tests using PROCESS showed that the effects of all neighborhood variables were mediated by Private-Restricted or Locally Integrated Network types on Social Loneliness only. Discussion and Implications These findings highlight the importance of neighborhood factors in relation to feelings of loneliness and the recognition of social network types as mediators of these relationships for social loneliness. The aspects of neighborhoods that prevent loneliness provide directions for planners and prevention programs. Interventions to prevent social loneliness can usefully and practicably focus on the housing and neighborhood environment.
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    Daytime fatigue as a predictor for subsequent retirement among older New Zealand workers
    (Elsevier Inc on behalf of National Sleep Foundation, 2021-12) Myllyntausta S; Gibson R; Salo P; Allen J; Gander P; Alpass F; Stephens C
    Objectives There is limited information on the role of fatigue on retirement, either independently or in association with poor sleep. The aim of this study was to examine the prospective association between daytime fatigue, measured as feeling tired or feeling worn out, independently and in relation to dissatisfaction with sleep, and subsequent retirement among 960 older workers in New Zealand. Methods Data from 2 consecutive surveys (2008 and 2010) of the New Zealand Health, Work, and Retirement Longitudinal Study were used. Poisson regression was used to investigate whether feeling tired and feeling worn out in 2008, along with dissatisfaction with sleep, were associated with self-reported retirement either due to health reasons or other reasons by 2010. Results The risk for retirement due to health reasons during a 2-year follow-up was 1.80-fold (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.16-2.45) among those who felt tired and 1.99-fold (95% CI 1.34-2.64) among those who felt worn out when compared to those not tired or not feeling worn out after adjusting for several sociodemographic, work characteristics and self-rated health. The risk for retirement due to health reasons was even higher when participant experienced both tiredness and feeling worn out. Dissatisfaction with sleep did not predict retirement due to health or other reasons. Conclusions Our results highlight that workers at risk of subsequent retirement due to health reasons may be identified with rather simple questions on tiredness and feeling worn out even among generally healthy older workers.