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  1. Oct 12, 2023 · High blood pressure and other conditions seem to raise dementia risk more in Black and South Asian adults than white adults. Read on for more on dementia risk and prevention.

  2. Aug 13, 2024 · New evidence supports the notion that in high-income countries, reducing dementia risk can translate to more healthy years, years free of dementia and a shorter duration of ill health for people who develop dementia. What still isn't known.

  3. Treatment with antidementia drugs may help delay cognitive decline and maintain daily functioning in some patients, with some evidence showing benefits for functional decline, neuropsychiatric symptoms, nursing home placement, and cognition [3 – 13].

  4. Our results are consistent with studies showing changes in dementia risk factors in the US over time. A study by Chen and Zissimopoulos 15 found an increase in diseases associated with dementia (eg, hypertension, diabetes) across all ethnic and racial groups over a 12-year period.

  5. Jan 17, 2024 · Researchers found controllable risk factors accounted for 33% of cases among Latinos, 29% among Native Hawaiians, 28% among Black people, 22% among white people and 14% of cases among Japanese ...

  6. Analyses of Medicare claims have found that roughly a third to half of eligible patients use anti-dementia drugs, with lower rates among Asians, Blacks, and Hispanics than among whites. 3 – 6 Other studies found that initiation of anti-dementia medication differed across racial groups in the United Kingdom, 7 as well as in a U.S. health system. ...

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  8. Oct 13, 2023 · Commenting on the study, David Thomas, Head of Policy at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said: ‘’It’s a shocking truth that people from ethnic minorities face an increased risk of a number of health conditions, and this impacts their ability to live a healthy life.

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