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Cakes, information, and support at Mossdale's dementia coffee morning

Cakes, information, and support at Mossdale's dementia coffee morning

Yahoo7 days ago
A York care home hosted a coffee morning for residents living with dementia, their family members, and the wider community recently.
Mossdale Residence Care Home, in Burnholme, offered homemade cakes and refreshments; leaflets and guidance from organisations; and friendly, one-to-one chats with care team members.
Attendees were able to share their dementia experiences, connect with others, and learn more about the condition.
Julie Banks, Mossdale home manager, said: "Dementia affects not just individuals, but families and loved ones too, and events like this help build a strong network of support, understanding, and compassion.
"We're proud to be part of a care group that champions awareness and education."
Dementia coffee mornings are held on the fourth Thursday of each month at three HC-One care homes in York: Mossdale, Handley House, and Ebor Court.
The venue alternates between the three homes each month.
The next event will take place on Thursday, July 24, at Handley House, in Clifton, from 10am to 12pm.
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A blood test even found levels of amyloid, a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease, were retreating in her brain, according to the study published in June 2024. 'I'm coming back. It was really good — like I was prior to the disease being diagnosed,' Maida, now 68, told a researcher on the study. 'An older but better version of me.' Maida's cognition showed additional improvement, however, after she completed a total of 40 weeks of intensive lifestyle changes, said principal investigator Dr. Dean Ornish, a clinical professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and creator of the Ornish diet and lifestyle medicine program. Ornish gave a study update on Tuesday at the 2025 Alzheimer's Association International Conference in Toronto. While not everyone in the 26-person interventional group benefited, 46% showed improvement in three of four standardized tests, he said, including one that measures changes in memory, judgment and problem-solving as well as the ability to function at home, practice hobbies and practice personal hygiene. 'An additional 37.5% of people showed no decline in cognition during those 40 weeks,' Ornish said. 'Thus, over 83% of patients improved or maintained their cognition during the five-month program.' The new findings mirrored those of other studies on lifestyle interventions, he said, including the recent US POINTER study, the largest clinical trial in the United States to test moderate lifestyle interventions over two years in people who are at risk but do not yet have Alzheimer's disease. 'Our study complements these findings by showing, for the first time, that more intensive lifestyle changes may often stop or even begin to reverse the decline in cognition in many of those who already have Alzheimer's disease, and these improvements often continue over a longer period of time,' Ornish told CNN. And unlike available medications for Alzheimer's, he added, lifestyle changes have no side effects, such as bleeding and swelling in the brain that may occur with the newest class of drugs. EmblemHealth, a New York-based insurance company, announced Tuesday that it will be the first health insurer to cover the Ornish lifestyle medicine program for patients who have early-stage Alzheimer's disease. The lifestyle intervention Ornish created — which he calls 'eat well, move more, stress less and love more' — has been tested before. In 1990, Ornish showed for the first time in a randomized clinical trial that coronary artery disease could often be reversed with nothing more than diet, exercise, stress reduction and social support. The US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, declared in 2010 that Ornish's program for reversing heart disease was an 'intensive cardiac rehabilitation' and that it would be eligible for reimbursement under Medicare. Additional research has shown the same four-part program can lower blood sugars and heart disease risk in patients with diabetes, reduce prostate cancer cell growth, improve depression and even lengthen telomeres, the protective caps of chromosomes that are worn away by aging. During the Ornish intervention, one group of people consumed a strict vegan diet, did daily aerobic exercise, practiced stress reduction and engaged in online support groups. The rest of the participants were in a control group and were asked to not make any changes in their daily habits. Therapists led hour-long group sessions three times a week in which participants were encouraged to share their feelings and ask for support. Meditation, deep breathing, yoga and other ways to reduce stress took up another hour every day. The program also encouraged participants to prioritize good-quality sleep. Supplements were provided to everyone in the intervention group, including a daily multivitamin, omega-3 fatty acids with curcumin, coenzyme Q10, vitamin C and B12, magnesium, a probiotic, and Lion's mane mushroom. In addition to online strength training led by a physical trainer, people in the intervention attended hour-long video classes on vegan nutrition hosted by a dietitian. Then, to ensure a vegan diet was followed, all meals and snacks for both participants and their partners were delivered to their homes. Complex carbs found in whole grains, vegetables, fruits, tofu, nuts and seeds made up most of the diet. Sugar, alcohol and refined carbs found in processed and ultraprocessed foods were taboo. While calories were unrestricted, protein and total fat made up only some 18% of the daily caloric intake — far less than the typical protein intake by the average American, Ornish said. Working harder pays off People in the intervention group who put the most effort into changing their lifestyle have the most improvement in their cognition, said Ornish, founder and president of the nonprofit Preventive Medicine Research Institute and coauthor of 'Undo It! How Simple Lifestyle Changes Can Reverse Most Chronic Diseases.' 'There was a statistically significant dose-response relationship between the degree of adherence to our lifestyle changes and the degree of improvement we saw on measures of cognition,' Ornish said. The 25 people in the study's original 20-week control group — who did not receive the intervention — had shown further cognitive decline during the program. They were later allowed to join the intervention for 40 weeks and significantly improved their cognitive scores during that time, Ornish said. It all makes sense, said co-senior study author Rudy Tanzi, an Alzheimer's researcher and professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School in Boston. 'If you picture a brain full of damage as a sink full of water, when you just turn off the tap, it takes a long time for that sink to slowly drain, right?' Tanzi told CNN in 2024. 'If you want the amyloid to go down in 20 weeks, as we found on one blood test, you're going to need a Roto-Rooter.' In the 2024 study, a blood test called plasma Aβ42/40 showed a significant improvement in the original intervention group. Aβ42/40 measures the level of amyloid in the blood, a key symptom of Alzheimer's. Tests that measure amyloid in different ways, however, did not show improvement, Dr. Suzanne Schindler, an associate professor of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis who specializes in blood biomarkers told CNN at the time. There was no significant change in a test for amyloid called p-tau 181, considered to be a superior measure of Alzheimer's risk, said Schindler, who was not involved in the study. Nor was there any change in glial fibrillary acidic protein, or GFAP, another blood biomarker that seems to correlate reasonably well with Alzheimer's disease. 'If one of these markers improves, you typically see all of them improve, so the fact they did not makes me wonder whether this effect is real,' Schindler said. 'If they were to repeat the study with a much larger population for a longer period of time, perhaps more change could be seen.' Over the complete 40-week program, however, a number of people in the intervention group did continue to improve their Aβ42/40 scores, according to the study update. 'Changes in amyloid — as measured as the plasma Aβ42/40 ratio — occur before changes in tau markers such as p-tau 218, so this is not surprising after only 40 weeks,' Ornish said. For Ornish, who has watched members of his family die from Alzheimer's disease, the study's results are important for one key reason — hope. 'So often when people get a diagnosis of dementia or Alzheimer's, they are told by their doctors that there is no future, 'It's only going to get worse, get your affairs in order.' That's horrible news and is almost self-fulfilling,' Ornish said. 'Our new findings empower patients who have early-stage Alzheimer's disease with the knowledge that if they make and maintain these intensive lifestyle changes, there is a reasonably good chance that they may slow the progression of the disease and often even improve it,' he said. 'Our study needs to be replicated with larger, more diverse groups of patients to make it more generalizable,' Ornish said. 'But the findings we reported today are giving many people new hope and new choices — and the only side effects are good ones.' Get inspired by a weekly roundup on living well, made simple. Sign up for CNN's Life, But Better newsletter for information and tools designed to improve your well-being.

‘The invisible threat': Air pollution exposure over time raises the risk of dementia, study finds
‘The invisible threat': Air pollution exposure over time raises the risk of dementia, study finds

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘The invisible threat': Air pollution exposure over time raises the risk of dementia, study finds

Breathing in dirty air regularly could raise your risk of dementia over time, a large new study has found. The analysis, published in The Lancet Planetary Health journal, is the largest study to date to confirm the connection between air pollution and brain health, though questions remain about the actual mechanism and the time period when people are most at risk. About 57 million people worldwide have dementia, which occurs when nerve cells' connections in the brain are lost or damaged. Scientists have identified a handful of risk factors, including air pollution, but until now, they haven't known which pollutants were riskiest. For the new analysis, researchers from the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom looked at data from 51 reports spanning nearly 30 million people, mostly in high-income countries. They found strong links between dementia risks and exposure to fine particulate matter from sources such as car emissions, power plants, and dust, as well as nitrogen dioxide from the burning of fuel and soot from things like car exhaust and burning wood. Related People who breathe dirty air are at higher risk of brain tumours that do not usually cause cancer These pollutants appear to have stronger ties to vascular dementia, which is caused by reduced blood flow to the brain, than to Alzheimer's disease, the most common form of dementia – but those differences may not be significant. 'Air pollution is not just an environmental issue – it's a serious and growing threat to our brain health,' Dr Isolde Radford, senior policy manager at Alzheimer's Research UK, said in a statement. Scientists still don't know whether air pollution actually causes dementia or what the biological pathways could be. But they think pollution may cause inflammation and oxidative stress – which can damage cells and DNA – in the brain, both of which have been linked to the onset and progression of dementia. 'The body has no effective defence against the ultrafine particle cocktails we generate outdoors, especially from traffic, and indoors, for example, in heating our homes using stoves,' Barbara Maher, a professor of environmental magnetism at Lancaster University in the UK who was not involved with the study, said in a statement. Related One in three people worldwide are breathing in household air pollution, researchers warn The analysis has some limitations. It is notoriously difficult to track exactly which pollutants a specific person is exposed to over time, how these pollutants interact with each other, and how this affects human health. This study, along with many others, estimated people's air pollution exposure based on their home address. It also isn't clear when in life this exposure matters most, though researchers believe it may be a period of years or even decades. 'A better approach [to research] is sorely needed,' Dr Tom Russ, a dementia specialist who researches old age psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh, said in a statement. Related Air purifiers, masks and staying indoors: How to reduce your risk from air pollution 'This article answers the question of whether air pollution exposure is associated with dementia better than previous work, but we still need better research to clarify how and why air pollution might be bad for the brain,' added Russ, who was not involved with the study. Even so, scientists and dementia groups called for governments to enact stricter air quality rules and take other steps to reduce people's exposure to air pollution. 'Far more needs to be done to tackle this invisible threat,' Radford said.

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