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Dementia Prevention Dementia Risks Differ Worldwide but Follow Familiar Patterns

Source: University of Southern California 3 min Reading Time

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A global study of more than 214,000 older adults shows that modifiable dementia risk factors vary sharply between countries, even as cardiovascular and behavioural risks often cluster in similar ways. The findings suggest that effective dementia prevention must combine locally tailored measures with strategies addressing common risk patterns.

A USC-led study of more than 214,000 older adults found that modifiable dementia risk factors vary widely across countries, highlighting the need for locally tailored prevention strategies.(Source:  free licensed /  Pixabay)
A USC-led study of more than 214,000 older adults found that modifiable dementia risk factors vary widely across countries, highlighting the need for locally tailored prevention strategies.
(Source: free licensed / Pixabay)

A major, USC-led study of more than 214,000 older adults across 14 countries and regions finds that the most common controllable risk factors for dementia — such as low education, high blood pressure and smoking — vary widely from country to country, meaning a one-size-fits-all approach to prevention won’t work everywhere.

The findings, presented at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference 2026 in London, also appear in the journal The Lancet Healthy Longevity. AAIC is the world’s largest forum for the dementia research community.

Most of what scientists know about preventing dementia comes from research in wealthy countries such as the United States and those in Western Europe. But this study, led by researchers at USC along with colleagues at Brown University and Johns Hopkins University, set out to see whether those same patterns hold true in low- and middle-income countries.

The differences were striking — but so were the similarities:

  • Differences: Low education affected 85.6% of older adults in China but only 12.0% in the United States, while high BMI (a measure of excess body weight) affected 44.9% of Americans compared to just 13.3% of people in India.
  • Similarities: Certain risk factors tended to cluster together in similar patterns worldwide, such as cardiovascular risks (e.g., high cholesterol and hypertension) or risky behaviors (e.g., smoking and drinking).

Lead author Emma Nichols, a research scientist with the Center for Economic and Social Research at the USC Schaeffer Institute for Public Policy & Government Service, says the consistency of these clusters was the most unexpected part of the findings.

“I was less surprised by the differences and more surprised by some of the similarities, particularly in the ways these risks are patterned across settings,” Nichols said. “That has real implications for how we design prevention strategies and interventions, because some things are more consistent across places than we might expect.”

For the study, researchers from the Gateway to Global Aging Data team combined harmonized survey data from long-running aging studies in 14 places — including the United States, England, Ireland, Northern Ireland, four regions of Europe, Korea, Mexico, China, Malaysia, Brazil and India — collected between 2009 and 2023. (Jinkook Lee of the Center for Economic and Social Research at the USC Schaeffer Institute is principal investigator of the Gateway to Global Aging Data project as well as the Longitudinal Aging Study in India.)

They analyzed 12 modifiable risk factors identified by the Lancet Commission on dementia (things such as hearing loss, depression, physical inactivity and social isolation), comparing how common each factor was; how they varied by age, gender and education level; and how often multiple risk factors showed up together in the same person.

The researchers say the findings should help guide decision-makers and health organizations in designing dementia-prevention strategies tailored to their own populations. For example, a program that connects people to care for diabetes could be redesigned to address the entire cluster of related cardiometabolic risks, such as high cholesterol and hypertension, at the same time.

For the average person, Nichols adds, the takeaway is that dementia risk is not fixed or fated: “Risk for these late-life outcomes isn’t predetermined. These are risk factors you experience over the life course, and you can have an impact on changing your own risk — while also recognizing the ways broader societal factors shape that risk, too.”

Future work may also expand to include newer risk factors such as poor sleep and additional countries as more harmonized data becomes available; new data collection is already underway in additional countries, including Kenya and Egypt.

Original Article: Differences in the prevalence and patterns of dementia risk factors: a harmonized cross-national comparison of 14 geographies using data from the Gateway to Global Aging; The Lancet Healthy Longevity; DOI:10.1016/j.lanhl.2026.100867

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