Mind Over Money Matters
New research examines the relationship between how we age and how we spend
To detect heart disease, doctors test cholesterol. To catch diabetes, they examine blood sugar. But uncovering Alzheimer鈥檚? An accountant may have the edge, according to research under way at 91桃色鈥檚听Knoebel Institute for Healthy Aging.
鈥淲e know through research that the first clinical markers of cognitive decline are found in financial decision making,鈥 says听Eric Chess,听director of KIHA鈥檚 newly created Financial Security and Cognitive Decline Initiative. 鈥淭his happens before you are noticing any symptoms. It happens before you would recognize any symptoms in someone else. And it happens decades before those types of symptoms occur.鈥
With help from the 91桃色 and with a recently awarded听grant from the NextFifty Initiative,听Chess and a broad, cross-disciplinary team are beginning to study the relationship between money management and diseases like Alzheimer鈥檚 and dementia.
According to the Alzheimer鈥檚 Association,听听鈥 most of them aged 65 and older 鈥 are currently living with the disease, which is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States. By the year 2050, experts project nearly 14 million Americans will suffer its effects 鈥 a figure that does not include the financial and emotional burden on their caretakers.
For Chess, the goal is to develop a test or other method to catch the illness early. As a medical doctor armed with a law degree, Chess says getting out in front of the disease is critical to averting it.
Keeping an eye on relatively common financial decisions could hold the key to doing so, he says. Financial exploitation and scams that prey on seniors are already well documented, but other avenues have been overlooked. Examining a person鈥檚 intent to buy or sell a home, for example, or altering the terms of a credit card could signal the beginnings of decline.
鈥淭o protect your finances is a critically important goal, but to protect your cognitive health is a much larger issue,鈥 Chess says. 鈥淪ince they are connected, we want to develop and test our own educational programs and make sure that they are having听an effect on people and making a difference.鈥
The trick, Chess says, is creating that blanket test 鈥 challenging because of the wide-ranging financial literacy of patients. Eventually, Chess desires a tech-based solution, like a popup on a financial adviser鈥檚 computer screen during a meeting with a middle-aged client.
As the initiative moves forward, Chess will draw on expertise from across the University community. Faculty,听graduate and undergraduate students听from such diverse disciplines as neuropsychology and computer science will play parts in crafting the test, he says. The听听also has a role to play, particularly in developing a broader outreach for increased awareness.
鈥淭he initiative is this two-pronged thing: advancing science but in partnership with the community,鈥 says GSSW assistant professor听听who has researched economic security for older adults. 鈥淚 am really excited about the interdisciplinary aspects of this. All that work partnering together is really exciting and helps. It addresses some of social work鈥檚 strengths, but also really helps us to learn about some professions that we haven鈥檛 always interacted with.鈥
Many social workers currently work in the financial realm, Greenfield says, but there is a need for professionals who are trained to work with older adults.
鈥淲e have a retirement crisis in our country with lots of people who are not prepared at all to finance their last years of life,鈥 Greenfield says. 鈥淎nd so anything that we can do to help people shore up their resources and maintain them wisely, [and] spend them down as necessary when they reach their last years of life, it鈥檚 all important work that needs to be done.鈥

