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Why so negative about preventing cognitive decline and dementia? The jury has already come to the verdict for physical activity and smoking cessation
  1. Leon Flicker1,
  2. Teresa Liu-Ambrose2,
  3. Arthur F Kramer3
  1. 1Western Australian Centre for Health and Ageing, Centre for Medical Research, Western Australian Institute for Medical Research, Professor of Geriatric Medicine, School of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia
  2. 2Department of Physical Therapy, University of British Columbia, Brain Research Centre, University of British Columbia, Centre for Hip Health and Mobility, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
  3. 3Beckman Institute for Advanced Science & Technology, Swanlund Professor of Psychology & Neuroscience, University of Illinois, Illinois, USA
  1. Correspondence to Professor Leon Flicker, Department of Geriatric Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, Box X2213 GPO, Perth, WA 6001, Australia; leon.flicker{at}uwa.edu.au

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The world is ageing rapidly, and accompanying this demographic transition will be a significant increase in the number of people with dementia, a condition that will affect the developing world more greatly than the developed world, in both absolute numbers and proportional increase.1 The human and financial costs of this condition have, not surprisingly, been of concern to older people, their families and policy makers around the world as they grapple with what will eventually be a major cause of life years lost to disability. The search is on for safe, effective and hopefully, affordable ways to prevent this common and devastating condition of older people.

Against this background, it was timely for the US Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health (NIH) to host a consensus conference on ‘Preventing Alzheimer’s Disease and Cognitive Decline,'2 supported by an Evidence Based Review.3 Many of the other scourges of old age have already demonstrated a reduction in age specific incidence, and thus there is hope that similar outcomes may be achieved for dementia. For example, there has been a 25% reduction in age-adjusted stroke death rates in the USA,4 an observation confirmed in Australia where further data indicate that this is more likely to be due to a decreased incidence of stroke rather than an improvement in survival following a stroke.5 Similarly, after an earlier increase, age-adjusted female hip fracture incidence decreased between 1995 and 2005 by about 25%.6 Therefore, prevention of these common problems of older people may be achievable and a goal for which it is worth striving. The degree of difficulty in ascertaining the population prevalence and incidence of dementia, and also the fact that many of the higher-quality studies were completed over two decades ago, makes it unlikely that …

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.