The researchers aimed to estimate the cost effectiveness of population-level interventions for tackling dementia risk factors. They found such interventions for tobacco smoking, alcohol use, diet modification to decrease hypertension and obesity, air pollution, and head injury.
Based on the effects on dementia, the researchers estimated that reductions in alcohol use through minimum unit pricing would be expected to produce cost savings of £280 million and 4767 QALY gains respectively – the second biggest benefit after population-level measures to lower obesity and hypertension rates.

Author

Naaheed Mukadam, Robert Anderson, Sebastian Walsh, Raphael D Wittenberg, Martin Richard John Knapp, Carol Brayne, Gill Livingston

Citation

Mukadam, N., Anderson, R., Walsh, S., Wittenberg, R.D., Knapp, M.R.J., Brayne, C. and Livingston, G. (2024), Benefits of population-level interventions for dementia risk factors: an economic modelling study. Alzheimer's Dement., 20: e085380. https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.085380


Source
Alzheimer's & Dementia Volume 20: Public Health
Release date
09/01/2025

Benefits of population-level interventions for dementia risk factors: an economic modelling study

Research paper

Abstract

Background

Some individual-level interventions for dementia risk factors could be cost saving.

The researchers aimed to estimate the cost effectiveness of population-level interventions for tackling dementia risk factors. They found such interventions for tobacco smoking, alcohol use, diet modification to decrease hypertension and obesity, air pollution, and head injury.

Method

The researchers used published intervention effect sizes and relative risks for each risk factor. They used a Markov model to estimate progression to dementia in populations with and without the intervention, looking at lifetime risk, using the population of England as an exemplar.

Result

Reformulation of food products to reduce salt and sugar intake and therefore reduce obesity and hypertension would be expected to produce cost savings of £2.4 and £1.1 billion, and QALY gains of 39,433 and 17,985, respectively.

Based on the effects on dementia, the researchers estimated that reductions in alcohol use through minimum unit pricing would be expected to produce cost savings of £280 million and 4767 QALY gains respectively.

Introducing low emission zones in the largest English cities without them, so decreasing pollution and dementia would be expected to lead to £260 million savings and 5119 QALYs gained.

Raising cigarette prices by 10% to reduce smoking rates, would be expected to lead to 2277 QALY gains and savings of £157 million from its effect on dementia.

Legislating for compulsory bicycle helmets for children reducing head injury and dementia would lead to 1554 QALY gains and £91 million savings.

Conclusion

The researchers advocate for these population-level interventions to help tackle lifecourse dementia risk and be cost-saving.


Source Website: Alzheimer's Association