학술논문

Physical and Mental Health Characteristics of 2,962 Adults With Subjective Cognitive Complaints
Document Type
article
Source
The International Journal of Aging and Human Development. 94(4)
Subject
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Aging
Mental Health
Mental health
Generic health relevance
Good Health and Well Being
Aged
Cognition
Humans
Surveys and Questionnaires
Amazon's Mechanical Turk
online labor market
subjective health
cognition
psychological well-being
emotions
aging
mental health
physical health
Amazon’s Mechanical Turk
Applied Mathematics
Public Health and Health Services
Psychology
Gerontology
Language
Abstract
We investigated subjective cognitive complaints (SCCs), as well as physical and mental health factors, in adults and older adults. U.S. residents (N = 2,962) were recruited via the Amazon Mechanical Turk platform and completed a 90-item survey. Overall, 493/1930 (25.5%) of younger adults and 278/1032 (26.9%) of older adults endorsed SCCs. Analyses revealed worse physical and mental health characteristics in the SCC+ compared to the SCC- group, with primarily medium (Cohen's d = 0.50) to large (0.80) effect sizes. Age did not moderate relationships between SCCs and physical/mental health. Results suggest that SCCs are associated with a diverse set of negative health characteristics such as poor sleep and high body mass index, and lower levels of positive factors, including happiness and wisdom. Effect sizes of psychological correlates were at least as large as those of physical correlates, indicating that mental health is critical to consider when evaluating SCCs.