In 1984, around 30% of Americans were diagnosed with dementia by the end of their 80s. Today it’s 10%.

If rates had stayed steady there would be 17 million Americans with dementia today. Instead there are 6 million. This saves us around a trillion dollars in medical bills per year and unknowable suffering.

Every five year cohort measured has had a lower risk than the cohort before them.

We don’t know why.
Is finally taking lead out of gasoline not a contributing factor?
@jakebroe that was also my first guess. Probably it’s not just one thing and it has a lot of confounding factors. Anyway it’s a reason for celebration, not everything is getting worse, some things improve despite our best efforts 😉