Giving Compass' Take:
- According to a national representative study, recent research indicates that one in ten older adults in the U.S. has dementia.
- Many respondents with dementia identified as Black or African American, and those having mild cognitive impairment are older adults who identify as Hispanic. How can public health officials help respond to the public health needs of communities of color?
- Read more about the dementia care system.
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Nearly one in 10 Americans over 65 has dementia, according to the first nationally representative study of cognitive impairment in more than 20 years.
The study also finds that another 22% have mild cognitive impairment. People with dementia and mild cognitive impairment are more likely to be older, have lower levels of education, and to be Black or Hispanic. Men and women have similar rates of dementia and mild cognitive impairment.
Although dementia and mild cognitive impairment are known to be common in the United States, accurate, up-to-date measures of their national prevalence were scarce.
“Because the HCAP study is part of the nationally representative and long-running Health and Retirement Study, these data not only show the burden of dementia now, but will be used in the future to track the trends in dementia burden in the decades ahead,” says study coauthor Kenneth Langa, professor in the University of Michigan Medical School, and a research professor in the Institute for Social Research, and Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
“Following those trends will be especially important given the likely impact of COVID and other recent population health changes on the risk for dementia in the coming decades.”
The study appears in the journal JAMA Neurology.
Researchers based the study on data on 3,500 individuals in the Harmonized Cognitive Assessment Protocol (HCAP) Project, part of the University of Michigan’s nationally representative Health and Retirement Study (HRS). Between 2016 and 2017, each participant completed a comprehensive set of neuropsychological tests and in-depth interviews, which were used to develop an algorithm for diagnosing dementia or mild cognitive impairment.
Rates of dementia and mild cognitive impairment rose sharply with age: 3% of people between 65 and 69 had dementia, rising to 35% for people aged 90 and over.
The data show a disproportionate burden of dementia among older adults who self-identified as Black or African American, of mild cognitive impairment among older adults who identify as Hispanic, and both categories of cognitive impairment among people who had fewer opportunities to obtain education.
Read the full article about rates of dementia by Morgan Sherburne at Futurity.