Dodging Dementia: More Of Us Get At Least A Dozen Good, Happy Years After 65
With longer lives and lower rates of dementia, most seniors are enjoying more years of life with good cognition ā a welcome trend.
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With longer lives and lower rates of dementia, most seniors are enjoying more years of life with good cognition ā a welcome trend.
Our experts track the signs of normal aging from ages 50 to 100 ā and there are some surprises.
Supporters call it the strongest move yet to document a patientās advance wishes in cases of severe dementia. Critics say it would deny basic care to societyās most vulnerable.
Seniors face tough ā often life-changing ā events throughout their final years. But this stage of life does not have to be limited to loss and deterioration.
āEdith + Eddie,ā a documentary shortlisted for an Academy Award, is a gripping look at a couple in their 90s caught up in an intense family conflict. But more facts about the disputes involving a parent with dementia help to paint a complicated story about aging in America.
The makers of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, or MoCA, say the test wasnāt meant for the masses. Now theyāre working on a āmini-MoCAā that people who are worried about possible dementia can take online.
Listen and learn from this Kaiser Health Newsā Facebook Live event. āNavigating Agingā columnist Judith Graham led a discussion about dementia, one of the most challenging chronic conditions for individuals and their families ā which affects millions of American families.
A new social movement in the U.S. tackles the stigma of living with Alzheimerās.
Patients are often aggressively screened for cancer, even if they wonāt live long enough to benefit.
Patients with Alzheimerās disease and other dementias can say in advance if and when they want caregivers to stop offering food and fluids by hand.
Nora Harris, 64, who had early-onset Alzheimerās disease, raised questions about the power ā and limits ā of an advance directive to withdraw care.
A Washington state man inherited the mutated gene that stole his motherās mind. He doesnāt have the disease, and doctors donāt know why.
A long history of racism and cruel experimentation in health care are among the reasons African-American families oppose donating patientsā brains for study.
Recent research shows that controlling blood pressure, exercising and cognitive training around middle age could help prevent cognitive decline or Alzheimerās disease.
Free, daylong sessions run by UCLA teach caregivers how to keep their loved ones safe and engaged, while minimizing the stress in their own lives. Similar programs exist in other states.
Research shows that people with dementia can benefit significantly from efforts to ease communication, improve overall health and other key measures.
The number of U.S. Latinos with the memory-robbing disease is expected to rise more than eightfold by 2060 to 3.5 million.
Researchers are studying families from the U.S. and Mexico for clues to how Alzheimerās develops in young patients, with the hope of finding treatments and even cures for the more common form of the disease.
Education and better heart health may deserve credit.
Playing with dolls is good therapy for some elderly people with dementia. They may think the dolls are real babies, but does it matter?
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