Asian Americans are less likely than their white peers to participate in health research involving MRIs and addressing this hesitancy could improve research, according to a Rutgers Health-led study.

Findings by the researchers, published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions, a journal of the Alzheimerโ€™s Association, surveyed older adults about their experiences and perceptions of MRI brain imaging scans, their desire to learn results of scans and their attitudes related to dementia and overall research participation.

According to the study, South Asian older adults โ€“ those 65 and older โ€“ are less likely than older white adults to believe that healthy people should participate in research studies when it may not benefit them. South Asian and East Asian older adults also have less desire to learn about findings from an MRI brain scan โ€“ commonly used in clinical research studies โ€“ than older white adults.


Charles Darwin Signature T-shirt – “I think.” Two words that changed science and the world, scribbled tantalizingly in Darwin’s Transmutation Notebooks.

โ€œAddressing hesitancy toward participation may improve representation of a group that does not usually take part in research studies,โ€ said Karthik Kota, an assistant professor of medicine and a geriatrician at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and lead author of the study.

Asian Americans represent the fastest-growing racial group in the United States and the fastest-growing group of adults over 65. As age is the biggest risk factor for dementia, this group is at higher risk for dementia. In a prior pilot study, Rutgers Health researchers encountered unexpected hesitancy from these groups related to MRI scans.

In the latest study, 256 respondents answered what type of MRI results they wanted to learn of โ€“ including receiving serious findings without treatment options or benign ones common with aging โ€“ and questions on research and brain health attitudes. Researchers found similarly low desire to learn of MRI results in South Asians and East Asians despite the groups showing differing support for research participation and future dementia or stroke worries.

Researchers said the findings reinforce the need to separate different Asian American subgroups when conducting health-related research.

โ€œUnderstanding concerns older Asian adults have about MRI brain findings could allow for more culturally appropriate return of scan results,โ€ Kota said. โ€œProgress in this area will not only affect how researchers recruit for studies, but also the expectations that the public may have when interacting with researchers.โ€

Research was supported by the Resource Center for Alzheimerโ€™s and Dementia Research in Asian and Pacific Americans at the Rutgers Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research (IFH), as well as the South Asian Total Health Initiative and the RWJBarnabas Health Chinese Medical Program.

IMAGE CREDIT: Life Of Pix.


Sign up for the Daily Dose Newsletter and get the morning’s best science news from around the web delivered straight to your inbox? It’s easy like Sunday morning.

Processingโ€ฆ
Success! You're on the list.

Better cognition tied to higher relapse risk after depression remission
A study found that cognitive problems like memory loss may not predict …
New research suggests sexual arousal could blind people to rejection cues
Research shows sexual arousal can distort perceptions, leading individuals to misinterpret ambiguous …
Scientists stunned: Volcano cleans up after itself by removing methane from the air
The 2022 Hunga Tongaโ€“Hunga Haโ€™apai eruption unexpectedly cleared methane pollution, revealing a …
Early life on Earth relied on a surprisingly scarce metal
A study from UWโ€“Madison reveals that ancient life, 3.4 billion years ago, …

Leave a Reply

Trending

Discover more from Scientific Inquirer

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading