New
research boosts the “use it or lose it” theory about brainpower and
staying mentally sharp. People who delay retirement have less risk of
developing Alzheimer’s disease or other types of dementia, a study of
nearly half a million people in France found.
It’s by far the largest study to look at
this, and researchers say the conclusion makes sense. Working tends to
keep people physically active, socially connected and mentally
challenged — all things known to help prevent mental decline.
“For each additional year of work, the
risk of getting dementia is reduced by 3.2 percent,” said Carole
Dufouil, a scientist at INSERM, the French government’s health research
agency.
She led the study and gave results Monday at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Boston.
About 35 million people worldwide have
dementia, and Alzheimer’s is the most common type. In the U.S., about 5
million have Alzheimer’s — one in nine people aged 65 and over. What
causes the mind-robbing disease isn’t known and there is no cure or any
treatments that slow its progression.
France has had some of the best
Alzheimer’s research in the world, partly because its former president,
Nicolas Sarkozy, made it a priority. The country also has detailed
health records on self-employed people who pay into a Medicare-like
health system.
Researchers used these records on more
than 429,000 workers, most of whom were shopkeepers or craftsmen such as
bakers and woodworkers. They were 74 on average and had been retired
for an average of 12 years.
Nearly 3 percent had developed dementia
but the risk of this was lower for each year of age at retirement.
Someone who retired at 65 had about a 15 percent lower risk of
developing dementia compared to someone retiring at 60, after other
factors that affect those odds were taken into account, Dufouil said.
To rule out the possibility that mental
decline may have led people to retire earlier, researchers did analyses
that eliminated people who developed dementia within 5 years of
retirement, and within 10 years of it.
“The trend is exactly the same,” suggesting that work was having an effect on cognition, not the other way around, Dufouil said.
France mandates retirement in various
jobs — civil servants must retire by 65, she said. The new study
suggests “people should work as long as they want” because it may have
health benefits, she said.
June Springer, who just turned 90,
thinks it does. She was hired as a full-time receptionist at Caffi
Plumbing & Heating in Alexandria, Va., eight years ago.
“I’d like to give credit to the company
for hiring me at that age,” she said. “It’s a joy to work, being with
people and keeping up with current events. I love doing what I do. As
long as God grants me the brain to use I’ll take it every day.”
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