| Literature DB >> 27178844 |
Mette Andersen Nexø1, Annette Meng1, Vilhelm Borg1.
Abstract
According to the use it or lose it hypothesis, intellectually stimulating activities postpone age-related cognitive decline. A previous systematic review concluded that a high level of mental work demands and job control protected against cognitive decline. However, it did not distinguish between outcomes that were measured as cognitive function at one point in time or as cognitive decline. Our study aimed to systematically review which psychosocial working conditions were prospectively associated with high levels of cognitive function and/or changes in cognitive function over time. Articles were identified by a systematic literature search (MEDLINE, Web of Science (WOS), PsycNET, Occupational Safety and Health (OSH)). We included only studies with longitudinal designs examining the impact of psychosocial work conditions on outcomes defined as cognitive function or changes in cognitive function. Two independent reviewers compared title-abstract screenings, full-text screenings and quality assessment ratings. Eleven studies were included in the final synthesis and showed that high levels of mental work demands, occupational complexity or job control at one point in time were prospectively associated with higher levels of cognitive function in midlife or late life. However, the evidence to clarify whether these psychosocial factors also affected cognitive decline was insufficient, conflicting or weak. It remains speculative whether job control, job demands or occupational complexity can protect against cognitive decline. Future studies using methodological advancements can reveal whether workers gain more cognitive reserve in midlife and late life than the available evidence currently suggests. The public health implications of a previous review should thereby be redefined accordingly. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27178844 PMCID: PMC4941143 DOI: 10.1136/oemed-2016-103550
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Occup Environ Med ISSN: 1351-0711 Impact factor: 4.402
Overview of inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Employees exposed to psychosocial working conditions in midlife or late life (minimum 40 years) | Diseases, disorders or medical conditions (eg, brain diseases or dementia) |
| Design | Longitudinal studies: observational cohort studies, case-control or randomised controlled trials | Cross-sectional studies, case studies, discussion papers, reviews, meta-analyses |
| Exposures | Psychosocial working conditions (eg, working hours, psychological work demands), work environment factors (eg, job control) | Chemicals (eg, solvents, manganese) physical demands, psychological distress |
| Outcomes | Levels of cognitive function or changes in cognitive function over time (eg, age-related cognitive decline) | Outcomes with no clear definition of cognitive function (eg, psychological health, psychological stress, depressive symptoms) |
Figure 1Flow chart of the systematic literature search and review process. OSH, Occupational Safety and Health.
Data extraction of studies included in synthesis (n=11)
| Study | Population (age, inclusion criteria, n=number of participant) | Exposure (categories) | Follow-up in years (FU) | Outcome measurements | Statistical tests and included covariates (variables) | Results: level of cognitive function | Results: change in cognitive function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fisher | Health and retirement study: employees aged 51 to 61 retired before 1998, n=4182 | Mental work demands (O*NET rating scale) | FU: 18 years | Levels of and changes in | Latent growth curve model (health status, depressive symptoms, demographic characteristics, retirement, practice effects) | Greater mental work demands associated with higher levels of episodic memory (intercept 0.06, p<0.05, 40% of the variance) and better mental status (intercept=0.11, p<0.05) before retirement at T1–T4 | Greater mental work demands associated with slower rates of decline in episodic memory before and after retirement (slope=0.01, p<0.05, 60% of the variance) and less decline in mental status after retirement (slope=0.004, p<0.05) than people with lower work demands |
| Marquie | VISAT longitudinal study: random sample 94 occupational physicians, aged 32–62 years, n=3237 | Cognitive stimulation at work (seven-item scale) | FU: 10 years | Composite score of cognitive function at T1, T2 and T3, and rate of change in function memory (Rey auditory verbal learning test) processing speed (WAIS: Digit Symbol Substitution Test) Attention (Sternberg's selective attention tests) | Mixed-model analyses and t tests (age, education, sex, medical, physical and psychosocial engaged lifestyle and health factors, time at examination) | Greater cognitive stimulation at work was associated with higher levels of cognitive functioning at T2 with mixed model (F=16.18; estimate=−0.03425; T=−11.36; p<0.01) and at T3 (F=16.18; estimate=−0.05266; T=−14.11) | T1–T2: two highest cognitive stimulation less decline (T=11.27, p<0.001; t=14.83, p<0.001) |
| Gow | Glostrup cohort: n=450, born in 1914 in Copenhagen area | Occupational characteristics at T0 (intellectual challenge/physical hazards/psychological demanding) | FU: 30 years (T0 1964, T1 1970, T2 1984, T3 1994) | Cognitive function at T0, T1, T2, T3 and change in function | Growth curve models (sex, education, social class, cognitive ability at T0) | Intellectual challenge lowered cognitive function compared with manual workers (intercept=−0.17, p<0.001); | NS: intellectual challenge (slope=−0.02, p=0.845); higher physical hazards (slope=0.06, p=0.598) and psychological demands (slope=−0.08, p=0.394) |
| Bosma | MAAS study: aged 50–80 | Mental work demands (Dutch mental complexity work scale) | FU: 3 years (T0 1993; T1 1996–1998) | Cognitive impairments (10th lowest percentile of composite score: Stroop Color and Word Test; verbal learning test, letter digit coding test; word fluency test) | Logistic regression (age, sex, education, length of follow-up interval, people with cognitive impairments excluded at baseline) | Persons in jobs with high mental work demands had lower risks of developing cognitive impairments (OR=0.79, CI 0.65 to 0.96) | |
| Finkel | SATSA, twins, >50–91 years, minimum one cognitive testing, n=462 | CW with data/people/things (Swedish, US census, DOT) | FU: 16 | Level and rate of changes in cognitive function | Latent growth curve model before and after retirement (education, n with dementia deleted, no gender differences, practice effects) | ||
| Schooler | Random selection of male civilian workers <65 years, who worked at all three waves, n=160 and spouses, >10 h work per week, in 1974 and 1994, n=73 | CW (self-directed work and DOT, USA) | F: 30 years | Intellectual function: Composite score | Structural equation modelling (age, gender, education, race, religious background, national background, medically disabled excluded) | CW T1–T3 better intellectual function at T2 (<57 years SC=0.11 p<0.05; >56 years SC=0.23, p<0.001) | |
| Andel | LNU and SWEOLD study: oldest old; age 77–99; n=537 | Self-reported and occupation-based job strain†; active job†; control† (high/low); demands† (high/low) | 34 years | Function: cognitive function (MMSE) and cognitive impairment (cut-off ≤7 MMSE) | Ordinal logistic regression (age, sex, education, self-rated health and year of cognitive screening) | ||
| Elovainio | Whitehall II study: civil servants age 35–55 years; 20 London-based civil service departments; n=4146 | Self-reported accumulated job strain†; active job† | 18 years | Level of short-term memory (20 word free recall test), inductive reasoning (AH4-I), vocabulary (Mill Hill) | Linear regression analyses (education, sex, age, smoking, alcohol consumption, BMI, depression, high strain at baseline, employment grade) | Active job and higher vocabulary (reference group=no active job) at T4 (mean T0–T2: 24.3–24.8, CI 24.1–24.7 to 24.7–25.0) higher phonemic fluency at T4 (mean T0–T2: 16.9 to 17.3, CI 16.6–16.9 to 17.1–17.6) and T6 (mean T0–T2: 15.5 to 16.1, CI 15.4–15.8 to 15.7–16.5) | NS: high strain and active job and vocabulary and phonemic fluency |
| Yu | Seattle Longitudinal Study: mean age 53 years; middle class; white; n=626 | Self-reported autonomy, work control and innovation | 14 years | Level of verbal memory (word fluency, immediate recall and delayed recall), inductive reasoning (PMA, ADEPT-letter, word series, ETS) | Growth curve models (age, sex, education, income, dementia) | High control better verbal (estimate=0.15, p<0.01) and inductive reasoning (estimate=0.15, p<0.01) at T3 | Work control increase memory score (t score=0.13, p<0.05) and inductive reasoning (t score=0.14, p<0.05) |
| Elovainio | Whitehall II study: civil servants age 35–55 years; 20 London-based civil service departments; n=4531 | Self-reported organisational justice at T0 and T1 | FU: 18 years; | Level of short-term memory (20 word free recall test), inductive reasoning (AH4-I), vocabulary (Mill Hill) | Linear regression analyses (age, sex, employment grade, behavioural risk, depressive symptoms, hypertension and high job strain) | Lower mean level of justice associated with lower levels of short-term memory (T4; B=−0.04, p<0.003; T6; −0.04, p<0.008), reasoning (T4; B=−0.04, p<0.038; T6; −0.04, p<0.038), vocabulary (T4; B=−0.05, p<0.001; T6; −0.04, p<0.05), phonemic (T4; B=−0.04, p<0.03; T6; −0.04, p<0.011), semantic (T4; B=−0.04, p<0.047; T6; −0.03, p<0.031) | |
| Virtanen | Whitehall II study: civil servants; age 45–66 years; 20 London-based civil service departments; n=2214 | Self-reported actual weekly working hours (long: >55 h, medium: 41–55, normal: ≤40) | 5 years | Level of and change in inductive reasoning T7-T5 (AH 4-I; short term) and level of short-term memory (20 word free recall test), vocabulary (Mill Hill) | Multiple analysis of covariance (age, sex, marital status, employment status, occupational grade, education, income, physical health, psychological distress, anxiety, sleep problems, health risk behaviours, social support, family stress and job strain) | Overall association of long working hours and poorer cognitive function (p=0.037, estimate not reported). | Overall association of working hours and change in score (p=0.044, estimate not reported). Long working hours (REF=normal) decline in reasoning (mean difference=−1.13, p<0.007) |
†Measured according to Karasek's13 two dimensions: job control and job demands. Active job is defined as a high degree of job control and demands; job strain is defined as a low degree of job control and a high degree of demands.
ADEPT, A Developmental English Proficiency Test (similar to Primary Mental Ability Test); AH4, Alice Heim Test; B, β standardised regression coefficient; BMI, body mass index; CW, complexity of work; DOT, Dictionary of Occupational Titles, US Department of Labor, 1965; ETS, Educational Testing Services; LNU, Swedish Level of Living Survey; MAAS, Maastricht Aging Study; MD, mean difference; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; O*NET, Occupational Information Network; PE, parameter estimates; PMA, primary mental ability; REF, reference group; SATSA, Swedish Adoption/Twin Study of Aging; SC, standardised coefficient; SWEOLD, Swedish Panel Study of Living Conditions of the Oldest Old; TICS, Telephone Interview of Cognitive Status; US census, US census bureau is a principal agency of the US Federal Statistical System responsible for producing data about the American people and economy; VISAT, Vieillissement, Santé, Travail (French); WAIS, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale.