Mental Health Mediators for Subjective, Not Objective, Cognition, and Community Participation Poststroke

OTJR (Thorofare N J). 2024 Mar 17:15394492241238949. doi: 10.1177/15394492241238949. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Previous studies have stated that both objective and subjective cognitive abilities and mental health symptoms are associated with community participation poststroke. However, there is a need to understand the direct and indirect associations among these variables in persons with stroke. The objective of this study was to investigate whether mental health symptoms mediate the associations of subjective and objective cognitive abilities with community participation poststroke. We built regression-based mediation models with 74 participants with mild to moderate stroke. Independent variables were objective and subjective cognitive abilities. The dependent variable was community participation. Mediators were mental health symptoms including depression, apathy, and anxiety. The results indicated that depression (b = .093), apathy (b = .134), and anxiety (b = .116) fully mediated the association between subjective cognitive ability (p < .05), but not objective cognitive ability (p > .05), and community participation poststroke. Our findings suggest that poor subjective cognitive ability combined with mental health symptoms should be addressed together to promote community participation poststroke.

Keywords: community participation; mental health symptoms; objective cognitive ability; stroke; subjective cognitive ability.

Plain language summary

Mental Health Mediators for Subjective, Not Objective, Cognition, and Community Participation PoststrokeResearchers and clinicians have used both objective and subjective tools to evaluate cognitive abilities including memory, attention, and thinking. Objective cognitive ability indicates the level of cognitive ability measured using an objective tool such as pen and paper tests while subjective cognitive ability refers to self-perceived cognitive ability indicated via self-report questionnaires. Previous studies have shown that both objective and subjective cognitive abilities and mental health symptoms (depression, anxiety, and apathy) are associated with community participation in persons with stroke. However, there is a need to understand the direct and indirect associations among objective and subjective cognitive abilities, mental health symptoms, and community participation. In this context, we investigated if mental health symptoms mediated the associations of subjective and objective cognitive ability with community participation poststroke. Our results suggest that mental health symptoms fully mediated the associations between subjective cognitive ability and community participation but not the associations between objective cognitive ability and community participation poststroke. Our findings propose that rehabilitation and occupational therapy professionals should carefully monitor subjective cognitive problems with special attention to persons with poststroke depression, apathy, and anxiety to increase community participation poststroke.