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  1. Modifiable risk factors for dementia are factors related to dementia risk that can be changed (e.g., hypertension, obesity, smoking, depression, physical inactivity, diabetes). One study by Lee and colleagues (2022) took a closer look at racial and ethnic differences across 12 well-established modifiable risk factors for dementia. They found

  2. As a result, better management of risk factors — particularly high blood pressure and diabetes — may help reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s and other dementias among African Americans and Hispanics.

  3. Studies have identified race and ethnicity as a social risk marker for inferior care quality in general. 34 Although most seniors with probable dementia in our sample (>92%) had seen a doctor in the last two years (with an average of 13 visits), one analysis suggested that non-Hispanic Blacks and Hispanics had lower utilization of Medicare annual wellness visits, 35 which include a short ...

  4. 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.

  5. Oct 13, 2023 · Researchers from the University College London have found that common dementia risk factors may have a more pronounced effect among people from certain ethnicities. The researchers analysed health records from nearly a million adults.

  6. Certain populations may be more likely to live in deprived neighbourhoods. This may increase dementia risk. In 2020 South Asian and Black communities in the UK were the most likely to live in deprived neighbourhoods. These often create barriers to education, housing, healthcare, and jobs for people.

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  8. The most prominent risk factors in the overall population were midlife obesity (56 499 [36.0%]), midlife hypertension (67 430 [37.1%]), and physical inactivity (93 743 [23.9%]) (Table 2). The prevalence of risk factors varied by race and ethnicity (Table 2).