Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Drops In Income Can Harm Your Brain: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Oct, 2019 08:20 PM
  • Drops In Income Can Harm Your Brain: Study

Young adults who experienced annual income drops of 25 per cent or more might be more at risk of having thinking problems and reduced brain health in middle age, a study said.


"Our exploratory study followed participants in the US through the recession in the late 2000s when many people experienced economic instability," said the study's lead author Leslie Grasset from the Inserm Research Centre in France.


"Our results provide evidence that higher income volatility and more income drops during peak earning years are linked to unhealthy brain ageing in middle age," Grasset said.


The study published in the journal Neurology, involved 3,287 people who were 23-35 years old at the start of the study and were enrolled in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study, which includes a racially diverse population.


Participants reported their annual pre-tax household income every three to five years from 1990-2010.


Researchers have examined how often income dropped as well as the percentage of change in income between 1990-2010 for each participant.


Participants were given thinking and memory tests that measured how well they completed tasks and how much time it took to complete them.


The study found that people with two or more income drops had worse performances in completing tasks than people with no income drops.


Participants with more income drops also scored worse on how much time it took to complete some tasks.


The results were the same after researchers adjusted for other factors that could affect thinking skills, such as high blood pressure, education level, physical activity and smoking.


There was no difference between the groups on tests that measured verbal memory.


Of the study group, 707 participants also had brain scans with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at the beginning of the study and 20 years later to measure their total brain volume as well as the volumes of various areas of the brain.


Researchers found when compared to people with no income drops, people with two or more income drops had smaller total brain volume.


People with one or more income drops also had reduced connectivity in the brain, meaning there were fewer connections between different areas of the brain.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support

Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support
The script, centred on missing and murdered Aboriginal women, struck a chord with LEAP Program Leader Shawn Macdonald and Arts Club Education Coordinator Kevan Ellis, who continued to seek ways to support its development.

Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support

Top 5 Reasons to Volunteer Abroad as a Teacher

Top 5 Reasons to Volunteer Abroad as a Teacher
With the new academic year starting tomorrow, Projects Abroad shares the most important motivations to volunteer as a teacher in the developing world

Top 5 Reasons to Volunteer Abroad as a Teacher

Keeping your garden healthy all year long

Keeping your garden healthy all year long
Tips and tricks for taking care of your lawn and garden this autumn

Keeping your garden healthy all year long

5 Ways to Thrive in the Midst of Challenge and Despair

5 Ways to Thrive in the Midst of Challenge and Despair
Using her seven keys to thriving, Dr. Stoneham, executive coach and author of The Thriver’s Edge: Seven Keys to Transform the Way You Live, Love, and Lead, offers five ways to thrive and have some control in your life while in the midst of challenge, overwhelm or despair.

5 Ways to Thrive in the Midst of Challenge and Despair

Jalwa: Dozens Of Families Evicted Every Year In Jordan Under Practice Rooted In Tribal Tradition

Jalwa: Dozens Of Families Evicted Every Year In Jordan Under Practice Rooted In Tribal Tradition
IRBID, Jordan — It was four in the morning when Asma Dawaghreh fled her home with her sick husband and six children. With nothing but the loose change in her pockets, she packed her family into a car and left under the cover of darkness.

Jalwa: Dozens Of Families Evicted Every Year In Jordan Under Practice Rooted In Tribal Tradition

Boy With Double-hand Transplant's Next Goal: Play Football

Boy With Double-hand Transplant's Next Goal: Play Football
PHILADELPHIA — It's been just over a year since 9-year-old Zion Harvey received a double-hand transplant, and he said Tuesday what he really wants to do is play football.

Boy With Double-hand Transplant's Next Goal: Play Football