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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2023 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Am Geriatr Soc. 2022 Sep 12;70(12):3390–3401. doi: 10.1111/jgs.18032

Table 1.

Characteristics of HRS respondents by cognitive status, 2018

Full Sample (n=1,291) Cognitively Normal (n=1,090) Cognitive Impairment (n=201) P-Value
Respondent Characteristics
Age (mean) 66.9 66.4 69.7 <0.001
Female 56.9 57.7 52.7 0.191
Married 63.2 63.6 61.2 0.520
Race/ethnicity
 Black 20.6 19.4 26.9 0.017
 White 66.5 69.7 48.8 <0.001
 Other 12.9 10.8 24.4 <0.001
 Hispanic 14.7 12.2 28.4 <0.001
Education
 Less than High school 12.9 8.8 34.8 <0.001
 High school or some college 60.0 60.6 56.2 0.240
 College 27.2 30.6 9.0 <0.001
Above median wealth 50.1 52.8 35.8 <0.001
Children 90.2 89.7 92.5 0.219
Recent Hospitalization 22.4 22.3 22.9 0.853
Self-rated Fair or poor health 26.2 23.6 40.3 <0.001
Any comorbidities 63.3 62.8 66.2 0.356
Heart condition 24.8 23.9 29.4 0.103
Parent/In-law with dementia 13.0 12.6 15.4 0.269
Missing/unsure parent dementia 50.0 49.1 55.2 0.110
Attend religious event monthly 50.1 49.7 52.2 0.512

Notes: Numbers are reported as percentages except for age. P-values are determined from chi-square tests and t-tests for association by cognitive status. A recent hospitalization includes a hospitalization in the past two years. ‘Any comorbidities’ represents respondents with diabetes, cancer, lung disease, a heart condition, past stroke, or a psychiatric disorder.