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Dementia Cases Climb, but We Aren't Powerless Against It - Newser

1 oră în urmă
1 minut min
Ion Ionescu
Dementia is poised to hit more Americans than ever, but the odds are quietly shifting in your favor. Vox's Bryan Walsh reports that while a graying population means new dementia cases in the US could top 1 million a year by 2060, a person at any given age is now far less likely to develop the condition than someone that age a generation ago. Across rich countries, age-specific dementia rates have fallen roughly 13% per decade since the late 1980s, with similar drops for Alzheimer's specifically. What's driving the improvement? Walsh points to better heart and blood vessel health—think blood pressure and cholesterol drugs, less smoking, and improved stroke care—as well as more years of schooling, which research has linked to lower dementia risk, though without pinpointing why. A 2024 Lancet commission estimated that tackling 14 midlife risk factors, from high LDL to hearing loss to inactivity, might prevent or delay up to 45% of cases, and Walsh flags the intriguing (but still early) evidence that the shingles vaccine may reduce dementia risk. His view? Some of us will undoubtedly develop dementia. "But that doesn't mean we're helpless." Read his full piece here.
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Why tiny amounts of vitamin B12 matter more as we age - The Conversation

Berna Namoglu/Shutterstock Why tiny amounts of vitamin B12 matter more as we age Published: June 12, 2026 10.56am CEST https://theconversation.com/why-tiny-amounts-of-vitamin-b12-matter-more-as-we-age-282520 https://theconversation.com/why-tiny-amounts-of-vitamin-b12-matter-more-as-we-age-282520 Link copied Share article Share article Copy link Email Bluesky Facebook WhatsApp Messenger LinkedIn X (Twitter) Print article Two micrograms is an almost unimaginably small amount. It weighs less than a tiny fragment of a grain of table salt.

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Rabid foxes found near popular trail in Baltimore’s Roland Park - thebanner.com

Baltimore health officials are warning the public about several foxes that tested positive for rabies after they were picked up near Stony Run Park, a popular wooded area in North Baltimore. Officials at the city’s Office of Animal Control say there could be five more foxes from the same den still roaming in the Roland Park neighborhood and that people should avoid contact and report any potential exposures to the health department.

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