A raft of business leaders filled The Cutler’s Hall on Tuesday for the official launch of the Master Cutler’s Challenge 2025.
There are two kinds of risk factors for dementia: non-modifiable and modifiable. Non-modifiable risk factors are ones that cannot be changed or eliminated, like aging, family history and genetics.
The movie September 5 is opening in theaters nationwide this weekend, a few weeks after the film lost out to The Brutalist for the Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Directed by Tim ...
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This image released by Paramount Pictures shows a scene from “September 5.” (Paramount Pictures via AP ...
Quarterly national accounts (income, saving, assets, and liabilities): September 2024 quarter - changes and data updates - DataInfo+ has details of data updates for this release. Well, unlike many ...
Eighty-one percent of eligible participants were unaware of their dementia diagnosis, with Mexican American participants showing lower awareness rates (95% CI, 0.81-0.89) compared with non ...
In addition to the most cutting-edge and expert-backed smarter living advice in the categories of wellness, health, ...
While dementia is much more common in older adults, hundreds of thousands of people are diagnosed with young-onset dementia (YOD) each year, and an extensive study published in 2023 sheds some ...
A disturbing new study has predicted that new cases of dementia will double by 2060, with millions of adults around the world developing the memory-destroying brain disease that ultimately renders ...
Nearly one in six adults and one in five children in Santa Barbara County are living at, near, or below the poverty line, reality that is hard to see because of the county's affluent image, said ...
The dementia risk was greater for women and Black Americans, the study found. New cases of dementia in the United States are projected to double in the next three decades, a new study suggests.
Dementia cases in the U.S. are expected to double by 2060, with an estimated one million people diagnosed per year, according to a new study led by Johns Hopkins University and other institutions.