Health
Related: About this forumSerious cognitive problems see abrupt drop among older people, study says
Good news from the Journal of Alzheimers Disease. Why is interesting (last paragraph at link).
BY KATIE CAMERO
DECEMBER 27, 2021 1:44 PM
There was an abrupt decline in the percentage of older Americans reporting serious problems with concentration, memory and decision making over a decade particularly among women, according to a new study. Researchers are heralding the findings as very welcome news.
From 2008 to 2017, the percentage of adults ages 65 and older in the U.S. with serious cognitive issues dropped from 12.2% to 10%, researchers from Canada found. In a hypothetical scenario without the decline, about an additional 1.1 million older people in the U.S. would have reported experiencing mental congestion.
And older women appeared to drive much of the plunge. Serious cognitive problems declined 23% over a decade among women in the age group, compared to 13% among men, the study published last month in the Journal of Alzheimers Disease found.
We were astonished to see the prevalence of cognitive impairment decrease so sharply over such a short period of time, study lead author Esme Fuller-Thomson, director of the University of Torontos Institute for Life Course & Aging, said in a news release posted Dec. 23. This decline in the prevalence of serious cognitive problems has a cascade of benefits for older adults, their families and caregivers, the health and long-term care system and the whole U.S. economy.
Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/national/article256868217.html#storylink=cpy
vanlassie
(5,899 posts)ShazzieB
(18,670 posts)katmondoo
(6,495 posts)I can always use Google
No Vested Interest
(5,196 posts)I'm 86, live alone in 1 floor house, take care of myself, but have occasional house-cleaning help, and daughter who assists as she is able.
Memory pretty good, but at times I feel I have too much on my plate. I am responsible for decisions re a disabled daughter in long-term care.
brush
(57,517 posts)here on DU, boomers must be doing something right.
Flame on.
DBoon
(23,055 posts)vanlassie
(5,899 posts)DBoon
(23,055 posts)brush
(57,517 posts) Its possible that better nutrition, declines in smoking and the phase-out of leaded gasoline which previous research has connected to increased rates of dementia also contributed to the positive trends.
Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/national/article256868217.html#storylink=cpy
alittlelark
(18,912 posts)Now that they have access.
Could there be a correlation?
No Vested Interest
(5,196 posts)Have plenty of daily meds, but luckily, nothing for pain.
I'm really more of the "Silent" generation of the 50's.
Never had a smoking habit, though many of my friends and cohorts did.
That has likely served me fairly well.
Srkdqltr
(7,665 posts)More chances to be interested in new things. More mobility and contact with information. Better education in women in the 40's and forward, and men also. Way more chances to pursue hobbies and interests. Just a better knowledge of what is out there. Good or bad.
bucolic_frolic
(46,997 posts)From 1930 to the mid 70s, trans fats were king. Good, white, hydrogenated vegetable oils. Then an oil awakening - olive, safflower, sunflower, soybean, blended margarines.
Some of it still isn't the best, but the decline of trans fat usage has been steady.
That's my hunch.
KT2000
(20,839 posts)or traditional housecleaning products that are no longer used. In the 40's women were instructed to wash their husband's wool suits in gasoline. They had a big tub of gasoline in the kitchen to wash the suits and other woolens. Women were also told to put on their gloves, wash them in the gasoline and wear them until they dried. Just one example.
No Vested Interest
(5,196 posts)at all.
My mother, a 20's flapper, would never have done such a thing, though she did use soap, not shampoo, to wash my hair, and rinsed it with vinegar to remove soap buildup and return shone to hair.
KT2000
(20,839 posts)that discusses the dangers.
I wrote an essay for a health magazine and consulted several books from the early 1900's that instructed women to use gasoline to clean clothes.
No Vested Interest
(5,196 posts)Soap products were very common and inexpensive.
Detergent products were not in use until 1950s.
Ivory soap bars, Ivory flakes, Dreft, Camay, Palmolive bar, Lifebuoy, Werk soap, Tag soap bars were common in 1930's, 40's.
Dry cleaning establishments were common in communities, also laundries, often run by Chinese immigrants. (I used a local Chinese laundry in NY state throughout the mid-50's, and there was still a Chinese laundry in my neighborhood well into the 60's.)
I_UndergroundPanther
(12,934 posts)I could never stand wearing clothes washed in gasoline.
I guess people smoked back than too?
One hot ash than you have a suit fire.