Why dementia prevention matters, and 5 ways to start now

In Canada, more than 770,000 people are living with dementia, and more than 350 people are diagnosed with it every day.

So, what is it exactly? Dementia is an umbrella term for various conditions that cause symptoms such as forgetfulness, losing directions, changes in personality, and difficulties with planning, organizing, and function.

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia. It can affect people in different ways — from forgetting recent conversations or familiar names or words to misplacing items such as keys, struggling with daily tasks, and changes in personality and emotions. While the impact can be debilitating, there is hope. Acting now can delay onset and, for some, even prevent dementia.

In fact, the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care report in 2024 estimated up to 45 percent of the risk of dementia may be modified. And, recently the U.S. POINTER study showed a structured lifestyle intervention geared towards reducing several risk factors has potential to prevent Alzheimer’s disease in those at risk of developing it. 

At Amica Senior Lifestyles, we weave dementia prevention strategies and specialized care throughout our programming. This series of articles introduces five evidence-informed dementia prevention strategies you can integrate into your daily life. Keep reading for an overview of key dementia-prevention strategies.

2) Take care of your heart and blood vessels

What’s good for your heart is good for your brain. High blood pressure, obesity, diabetes, high lipids (e.g. bad cholesterol), smoking, and excessive alcohol use are key causes of unhealthy blood vessels.

Treating these factors with a healthy diet (fruits, vegetables, fish, low sugars, low processed meats, et cetera), and medications to address high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol, help prevent dementia. Why? These treatments keep the blood vessels of the brain healthy, reducing inflammation and oxidation of lipids in the brain....

Check back October 11 for a deep dive on this tip