Categories
Nevin Manimala Statistics

A Microsimulation of Well-Being and Literacy Interventions to Reduce Scam Susceptibility in Older Adults

J Appl Gerontol. 2023 Sep 13:7334648231196850. doi: 10.1177/07334648231196850. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Poor financial and health literacy and poor psychological well-being are significant correlates of scam susceptibility in older adults; yet, no research has examined whether interventions that target these factors may effectively reduce susceptibility. Using longitudinal data from older adults in the Rush Memory and Aging Project (MAP) (N = 1,231), we used microsimulations to estimate the causal effect of hypothetical well-being and literacy interventions on scam susceptibility over six years. Microsimulations can simulate a randomized trial to estimate intervention effects using observational data. We simulated hypotheticalinterventions that improved well-being or literacy scores by either 10% or 30% from baseline, or to the maximum scores, for an older adult population and for income and education subgroups. Simulations suggest thathypotheticalinterventions that increase well-being or literacy cause statistically significant reductions in scam susceptibility of older adults over time, but improving well-being caused a greater-albeit not significantly different-reduction compared to improving literacy.

PMID:37704219 | DOI:10.1177/07334648231196850

By Nevin Manimala

Portfolio Website for Nevin Manimala