In studies like this I always wonder if they have the causation reversed. Is the exercise staving off the dementia or are people who are healthy enough (mental and physical health) to exercise in the first place less likely to get dementia?
>> Each 30 minutes higher MVPA was associated with a 4% reduction in the risk of all-cause dementia
So 4% reduction means... complete chance of dementia? Or it helps 4 in 100 people? How can that be applied? I think that number lacks qualitative information. Conclusions like this are vague. I could see a number like 33% or 50% being more easily applied for expected results. 4% seems within a margin of error.
I think they're saying each 30 minutes of exercise per week is associated with a 4% reduction of risk. So if you do 3 hours per week it's a 36% reduction (roughly).
This headline is badly misleading . Traumatic and highly stressful moderate to vigorous physical raises dementia risk.
Manageable physical activity reduces dementia.
Do you have a source for this?
In studies like this I always wonder if they have the causation reversed. Is the exercise staving off the dementia or are people who are healthy enough (mental and physical health) to exercise in the first place less likely to get dementia?
>> Each 30 minutes higher MVPA was associated with a 4% reduction in the risk of all-cause dementia
So 4% reduction means... complete chance of dementia? Or it helps 4 in 100 people? How can that be applied? I think that number lacks qualitative information. Conclusions like this are vague. I could see a number like 33% or 50% being more easily applied for expected results. 4% seems within a margin of error.
I think they're saying each 30 minutes of exercise per week is associated with a 4% reduction of risk. So if you do 3 hours per week it's a 36% reduction (roughly).
Glance at the study? 90k 63+ yr olds over 4.4 years followed where 700+ developed dementia.