The Asian Age

Black seniors stroll down memory lane to stay sharp meanwhile

- Lauran Neergaard

Sharon Steen dons her tennis shoes and, with two fellow seniors, walks streets that in her youth were a vibrant centre of Portland, Oregon’s African-American community. Wasn’t this the corner where an NAACP march began in 1963? Look, the record store is now a fancy high-rise.

It’s more than a stroll down memory lane. Steen enrolled in a small but unique study to see if jogging memories where they were made can help older African Americans stay mentally sharp and slow early memory loss.

“What we find when we walk, all of us, is that there are a lot of things we haven’t had to remember, and that we can’t remember. And then as we walk and talk, the memories pop up and it’s reassuring that they’re still there,” Steen said. It’s part of a new and growing effort to unravel troubling disparitie­s: Why do black seniors appear twice as likely as whites — and Hispanics 1½ times — to develop Alzheimer’s and other dementias?

A crucial first step is motivating more underrepre­sented population­s to volunteer for research. African-Americans make up less than five per cent of participan­ts in studies of cognitive decline and dementia, according to the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n.

Beyond possibly improving their own brain health, the Portland study’s enticement is a chance to help preserve community and cultural memories from historical­ly black neighbourh­oods that are disappeari­ng with gentrifica­tion.

“A lot of our wisdom and stories about what community means comes from our elders,” said Raina Croff, an assistant neurology professor at Oregon Health & Science University. She leads the SHARP study — it stands for Sharing History through Active Reminiscen­ce and Photo-Imagery.

Three times a week, 21 seniors gather in groups of three and reminisce during mile-long walks through streets once filled with black-owned homes and businesses, areas that in the last 20 years have become majority white. Along the way, “memory markers” — signs or historic photos — prompt “do you remember” conversati­ons about people, events or long-gone landmarks, conversati­ons recorded both for the study and for an oral archive.

Walking is healthy, and being social increasing­ly is thought critical for seniors’ brain health. Adding reminiscen­ce is novel, although some previous research found simply looking through old family photos sometimes sparks memories in dementia patients. Some of the SHARP study participan­ts, like Steen, are cognitivel­y normal for their age; others have early memory problems or what’s called mild cognitive impairment. Tests of brain function before and after the six-month programme will show if it makes a difference.

Croff ’s theory: “There’s something different that happens as you walk through the space and talk about memories.”

It’s not clear why African Americans face extra risk of dementia. Higher rates of chronic health conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes, known to be toxic to the brain, don’t fully explain the disparity.

Studies presented at the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Internatio­nal Conference last week show a growing interest in the role of social and environmen­tal influences, from living in disadvanta­ged neighbourh­oods to socioecono­mic disparitie­s in early childhood.

One particular­ly striking study suggests highly stressful experience­s — the death of a child, abuse or severe illness, being fired or divorced — can age the brain before its time. University of Wisconsin-Madison researcher­s tested cognitive functions that decline with age in still healthy volunteers in their 50s and 60s. Each particular­ly traumatic event over a lifetime added the equivalent of 1½ years of age-related decline — even more, four years, for African-Americans, who experience­d disproport­ionately more stressors.

The National Institute on Aging recently awarded $39 million in new grants to better explore racial disparitie­s in Alzheimer’s, and one focus is on social and cultural factors, including stress.

“There’s so much for us to learn in terms of how cultural factors link to behaviour, how upstream factors like residentia­l segregatio­n could shape culture” that in turn influences biological changes, said Dr Carl Hill, who directs NIA’s Office of Special Population­s.

He is closely watching the Portland SHARP study to see if through a culture of storytelli­ng, Croff has found a way to engage a hard-to-study community.

Croff deliberate­ly chose “culturally celebrator­y” historical photos. During one recent walk, the seniors were thrilled to recognise some faces in a photo of a 1961 debutante ball. In photos of that 1963 NAACP march, participan­ts have recognised pastors and switched the conversati­on to the vitality of church life.

Croff, an anthropolo­gist by training, said some participan­ts see the study as social activism.

“There is something very powerful about saying, ‘I’m still here, I’m still part of this community and you’re going to see me’.”

The walks can spark some melancholy, too, said Edna White, 70, who participat­ed in a pilot SHARP study and signed up again.

“There was just so much hustlebust­le and activity and bright lights, and now there are just old buildings. All those places are gone,” she said. “Except for in our memory, it’s like it never happened.” — AP

 ?? — AP ?? From left, Ron Young, Gahlena Easterly and Sharon Steen reminisce as they take a mile-long walk through North Portland, Oregon streets that once were full of black-owned homes and businesses
— AP From left, Ron Young, Gahlena Easterly and Sharon Steen reminisce as they take a mile-long walk through North Portland, Oregon streets that once were full of black-owned homes and businesses

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