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The number of Americans living with Alzheimer's is growing — and growing fast.
Nearly 7 million Americans have Alzheimer's.
An estimated 6.9 million Americans age 65 and older are living with Alzheimer's in 2024. Seventy-three percent are age 75 or older.
About 1 in 9 people age 65 and older (10.9%) has Alzheimer's.
Almost two-thirds of Americans with Alzheimer's are women.
Older Black Americans are about twice as likely to have Alzheimer's or other dementias as older Whites.
Older Hispanics are about one and one-half times as likely to have Alzheimer's or other dementias as older Whites.
As the size of the U.S. population age 65 and older continues to grow, so too will the number and proportion of Americans with Alzheimer's or other dementias. By 2050, the number of people age 65 and older with Alzheimer's may grow to a projected 12.7 million, barring the development of medical breakthroughs to prevent or cure Alzheimer's disease.
FTD and vascular dementia have the shortest lifespan. Victims normally pass within 5 years of diagnosis.
I'm sorry your husband was diagnosed with dementia recently. I lost my mother to vascular dementia in 2022 after a 6 yr battle.
Wishing you the best of luck and support moving forward.toward.
In high school, I worked for a senior facility, otherwise known as Boulders nursing home. The residents could mostly get to dining on their own. The average age was mid 70s, and they were all somewhat with it.
Likely most of said residents died within five years of cardiovascular disease or stroke or cancer. Nowadays there is more “saveabity” meaning the person gets to continue their life to the point they experience dementia.
It’s not plastics or what have you that has caused more dementia. It’s that medicine has eliminated the stops before dementia while adding to the risk of dementia.
If you live in a 55 and over , of course you will see this happening a lot in a small radius .
If you live in an area where the average age is higher, then this increases the odds that those neighbors were on their way to dementia for multiple other reasons.
People can have all the theories in the world but unless these theories are proven through more than one, large-scale, mass-participant studies then you are just operating from your biases.
The medical science community right now is not even sure what causes dementia even after all sorts of studies. It is inherently difficult to study dementia in relationship to the environment because it is difficult to control the literal environment that people live in. And, how to do you have a control group if they too live in and breath the same air, the same dirt, etc?
Some dementias are inherited, as was the case with my Aunt who lived to almost 101 (showed symptoms in late 80s and passed in Jan 2023). She lived with her older sister their whole lives (and 20 of those years was with me as I grew up). They lived identical lives, even working in the same pharma company. Ate the same foods (Mediterranean diet), lived in the same homes (NYC and NJ), had the same friends, had no bad habits, retired withing 2 years of each other, etc. Yet one sister developed dementia and the other didn't. In fact the other one is now 105 living in FL with very little cognitive decline. This can only mean one thing: the other sister inhereted her dementia.
Their Mom (my Grandmother) also lived to 96 despite living with a smoker husband who passed from lung cancer at 77 (and worked in his own machine shop breathing in all sorts of fumes). All their 8 children lived into their 90s, despite some of them smoking in their youth. Some developed dementia very late in their lives.
If you have theories about the source of dementia then you should research whether environmental variables as a cause is supported by *multiple reputable and reproduced* large-scale studies. Then you won't have to live in fear for no reason.
As for "people in other countries" -- they don't do studies to the extent that is done in other parts of the world where medical science is a priority. Studies are labor intensive, time-consuming and expensive, so without a *reason* to do the study, plus government funding or grants -- they don't happen. Medtech companies fund studies because they have financial interest in the research and outcomes.
Just saying there's a lot of wild guessing in some of these responses.
The link between pesticides and Parkinson's is now VERY GOOD, but of course will require more and more numbers to study. One cannot take a cluster, move it, and see what happens when it does NOT live in the Central Valley. Same with asthmatic children.
The Camp LeJeune studies in which we consider it now proven why these guys got so ill due to the numbers and the specificity of the agents, are quite interesting. Accepted of course by the government in that we are paying a hefty price for it.
As an RN I am kind of the last person into a good conspiracy theory, but we have indications a-plenty now. IMHO.
The causes of vascular dementia are known - strokes, high blood pressure, things that disrupt the blood flow to the brain cells. It has nothing to do with where you live.
Many of the wives (if they didn't die in childbirth) and daughters who continued to live on the farm, passed at even older ages.
Perhaps the records favored the longer lived? Which was your relevant 'old country'?
They keep there body and brain moving and that's what everyone needs more of.
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