Cognitive Predictors of Everyday Functioning in Older Virally Suppressed Women with HIV in the Women’s Interagency HIV Study
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In the Women’s Interagency HIV Study, we examined the association between objective cognitive test performance and the self-rated Lawton and Brody scale of Independent Activities of Daily Living (IADL) in 754 older (50+) women with HIV (WWH; 84% virally suppressed). To handle this longitudinal data, weighted logistic mixed effect models examined associations between cognitive domain performance (predictor) and functional outcomes (IADL item level scores). In the total sample, poorer motor performance was associated with impairments in home repairs , housekeeping , and laundry and poorer executive functioning was associated with impairment in planning social activities . Among older virally suppressed-WWH, poorer motor performance was associated with deficits in home repair and poorer executive performance was associated with deficits in planning social activities . Since motor and executive performance were related to impairments in certain IADLs, strategies such as cognitive training targeting these domains could improve everyday functioning.