Daily Mail

Global cases of dementia ‘will treble by 2050’

- By Shaun Wooller Health Correspond­ent

Dementia cases will treble by 2050 unless people adopt healthier lifestyles and education improves, a major study suggests.

Experts warn of a potential dementia timebomb, with 153million living with the condition worldwide within decades.

This is up from 57million in 2019, with the soaring numbers fuelled by growing and ageing population­s as well as poor diets and a lack of exercise.

Researcher­s are now calling for ‘ more aggressive prevention efforts’ to limit the disease.

This includes improvemen­ts to education, diet and physical activity, better access to health and social care and reduced rates of smoking. more funding is also needed to discover effective drugs, according to the Global Burden of Disease study.

The first comprehens­ive analysis of dementia prevalence, led by the University of Washington, included data from 195 countries and territorie­s. it examined the impact of expected trends in smoking, obesity, high blood sugar and low education, which are known to increase dementia risk.

The findings, published in the Lancet Public Health journal, said improved access to education could lead to 6.2million fewer cases of dementia worldwide by 2050. But this decrease could be more than offset by a projected 6.8million additional cases linked to obesity, high blood sugar, and smoking.

Women with dementia outnumbere­d men with the disease 100 to 69 in 2019 and this pattern is expected to remain in 2050.

Dementia cases are expected to rise in every country, with the smallest increases likely in high-income asia Pacific (53 per cent) and the largest growth in north africa and the middle east (367 per cent).

the number of dementia cases in the UK is forecast to increase by 75 per cent, from 907,000 in 2019 to almost 1.6million in 2050.

Lead author emma nichols said: ‘We need to focus more on prevention and control of risk factors before they result in dementia. For most, this means scaling up locally appropriat­e, low-cost programmes that support healthier diets, more exercise, quitting smoking, and better access to education.

‘and it also means continuing to invest in research to identify effective treatments to stop, slow, or prevent dementia.’

Dementia is the seventh leading cause of death worldwide and a major cause of disability and dependency among older people.

it is thought to have cost the global economy more than £740billion in 2019.

‘Poor diets and a lack of exercise’

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