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2 surprising jobs appear to protect against death from Alzheimer’s disease

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2 surprising jobs appear to protect against death from Alzheimer’s disease

Paper Summary

Methodology

Researchers analyzed death certificates from 2020 to 2022, carefully adjusting for factors like age, sex, race, and educational background. They compared Alzheimer’s-related death rates across 443 different occupations, with a particular focus on jobs requiring intricate navigation skills.

Key Results

Of the nearly 9 million death certificates analyzed, 348,328 individuals (3.88%) had Alzheimer’s disease listed as a cause of death. Specifically, among taxi drivers, 171 out of 16,658 (1.03%) died from Alzheimer’s disease, while among ambulance drivers, only 10 out of 1,348 (0.74%) had Alzheimer’s as a cause of death. After carefully adjusting for factors like age, sex, race, and educational background, these two occupations consistently showed the lowest proportions of Alzheimer’s-related deaths across all 443 studied professions.

In contrast, other transportation jobs with less dynamic navigation requirements showed higher mortality rates: bus drivers at 3.11%, aircraft pilots at 4.57%, and ship captains at 2.79%. Importantly, when researchers examined other forms of dementia, they did not find similar patterns, suggesting something unique about the relationship between Alzheimer’s disease and spatial processing occupations. The study also revealed that taxi and ambulance drivers had the lowest mean age at death among navigational occupations – 64.2 years for ambulance drivers and 67.8 years for taxi drivers – and were predominantly male.

Study Limitations

The researchers acknowledge this is an observational study. They recognize that people at higher risk of Alzheimer’s might be less likely to enter memory-intensive driving jobs. However, they argue this is unlikely, given that Alzheimer’s symptoms typically develop after working age.

Discussion & Takeaways

This groundbreaking study opens a fascinating window into how our professional lives might impact brain health, suggesting that cognitive engagement could play a crucial role in protecting against Alzheimer’s disease. The research highlights the potential protective effect of jobs requiring constant spatial navigation, indicating that mental activities that challenge our brain’s mapping and problem-solving capabilities might help maintain cognitive resilience.

“We view these findings not as conclusive, but as hypothesis-generating,” Jena emphasizes. “But they suggest that it’s important to consider how occupations may affect risk of death from Alzheimer’s disease and whether any cognitive activities can be potentially preventive.”

Funding & Disclosures

The study was unfunded, with one author receiving a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality unrelated to this research. The authors declared no direct conflicts of interest that would compromise the study’s integrity.

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