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Het RIVM maakte deze toekomstverkenning in opdracht van het ministerie van VWS (Ministerie van Volksgezondheid, Welzijn en Sport) in samenwerking met wetenschappelijke experts en professionals uit de zorg. Het ministerie van VWS wil samen met betrokken partijen werken aan een toekomstvisie op de palliatieve zorg in Nederland. Bij palliatieve zorg gaat het over alle zorg en ondersteuning […]
Achtergrond De overdracht van zuurstof naar de weefsels in het menselijk lichaam hangt bijna volledig af van het niveau en de functie van hemoglobine ...
Alle personen van alle leeftijden, zowel gezonde als met onderliggende aandoeningen, lopen risico op een RSV-infectie. De morbiditeit is het grootst b...
Multiple preoperative factors can identify high-risk patient subgroups via quantile and ordinal regressions. These inform targeted resource allocation...
Apolipoprotein E (ApoE) ?4 genotype is a well-known risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, its effect on predicting cognitive decline in i...
AbstractObjectivesProsociality, defined as positive other-regarding intentions and behaviors, is a modifiable factor demonstrated to be associated with better mental, physical, and cognitive health in older adults. Prior studies have largely focused on individual prosocial behaviors, especially volunteering. This study examines whether prosocial intentions are associated with maintaining cognitive health over time.MethodsData are from 7,844 adults aged 50 or older in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. A 9-item prosocial intentions scale was derived from self-reported items assessing altruism and collectivism. Cognitive health was assessed via biennial completion of tasks related to executive function and verbal memory and incident dementia diagnosis over 11 years. Linear mixed-effects models examined relationships between prosocial intentions and changes in executive function and verbal memory. Cox proportional hazards models assessed risk of developing dementia. A broad array of demographic, socioeconomic, and health-related covariates were also considered.ResultsResults from mixed-effects analyses suggest higher prosocial intentions are associated with better cognitive health maintenance after controlling for sociodemographics and baseline health characteristics including depressive symptoms. Participants with high versus low prosocial intentions had 24% slower decline in verbal memory and 55% slower decline in executive function. Similarly, higher prosocial intentions were associated with a 35% reduced hazard of dementia during this same period in fully adjusted models.DiscussionThese results suggest aspects of prosociality beyond formal volunteering facilitate maintaining cognitive health among older adults and may provide novel targets for future interventions to enhance healthy aging.
Data from a nationwide survey on Japanese assistant care workers showed that workload had a main predicting effect on emotional exhaustion, which was ...