Women Who Are Fitter In Mid-Life May Be Less Likely To Have Dementia Later

The CBS Evening News (3/14, story 10, 1:35, Glor) reported, “A new study out today finds women who are physically fit may be 90 percent less likely to develop dementia.” According to medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula explained that researchers following women in their 40s found that, after testing for fitness levels and the rates of dementia over a period of nearly 40 years, women with the highest levels of fitness “on average developed dementia at a rate of about five percent.”

USA Today (3/14, Weintraub) reports that the study published online March 14 in Neurology revealed that “the few highly fit women who did develop dementia became symptomatic at age 90 on average, 11 years later than the moderately fit,” the study found.

TIME (3/14, Park) reports that in contrast, “women with lower fitness had a 41% higher risk of developing dementia than women with average fitness.” The study “involved nearly 1,500 women in Sweden who provided information on their physical activity levels and took cognitive tests for up to 44 years.”

Also covering the study are HealthDay (3/14, Gordon) and Healio (3/14, Demko).

Related Links:

— “‘Highly fit’ middle-age women nearly 90% less likely to develop dementia decades later, study finds,” Karen Weintraub, USA Today, March 14, 2018.

Posted in In The News.