Association of Neighborhood-Level Disadvantage With Alzheimer Disease Neuropathology
JAMA Network Open2020Vol. 3(6), pp. e207559–e207559
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2020 papers
W. Ryan Powell, William R. Buckingham, Jamie L. Larson, Leigha Vilen, Menggang Yu, M. Shahriar Salamat, Barbara B. Bendlin, Robert A. Rissman, Amy Kind
Abstract
The findings of this cross-sectional study suggest that social determinants of health data can be linked to preexisting autopsy samples as a means to study sociobiological mechanisms involved in neuropathology. This novel technique has the potential to be applied to any brain bank within the United States. To our knowledge, this is the first time Alzheimer disease neuropathology has been associated with neighborhood disadvantage.
Related Papers
- → Learning Disability and Cultural-Economic Disadvantage: The Case for a Relationship(1988)14 cited
- → Australian Mobility Report Cards: Which Universities Admit the Most Disadvantaged Students?(2021)1 cited
- Addressing locational disadvantage effectively (International evidence)(2010)
- → COVID-19 and the disadvantage gap(2020)2 cited
- A framework for integrating disadvantaged analysis into transportation planning models(2006)