(Daily Mail) The deadly surge of Alzheimer’s across America in the past 20 years has been laid bare in a series of interactive maps.
Fatalites have spiraled 168 percent, official figures show, jumping from about 44,000 deaths a year in 1999 to 120,000 in 2021, the latest date available.
An aging population and the rise of sedentary lifestyles and poor diets are all blamed for the increasing numbers.
Every state bar one has seen a surge in Alzheimer’s fatalities over the two decades to 2021, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows.
Mississippi has seen the biggest jump in its death rate, up three-fold from 13.3 to 52.8 deaths per 100,000 people. Only Maine saw a drop, with the rate down seven percent over the same period.
Four of the top five states with the sharpest rise are in the South: Arkansas (up 191 percent), Alabama (162 percent), and Louisiana (up 140 percent).
Hawaii (154.3 percent) was the only state in the top five that was not in the South.
Southern states have been historically less affluent than their northern neighbors, and have higher rates of obesity and diabetes, which raise the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
In Hawaii, the rise has been blamed on its growing elderly population.
The expense of living in the state — which was ranked as the least affordable for retirment last year — may also be a factor because it leaves people less likely to have health insurance.
Only Maine recorded a fall in its Alzheimer’s rate over the two decades, dropping nearly eight percent from 29.6 to 27.4 per 100,000 people.
It was not clear why this was the case.
But the California-based research organization the RAND Corporation has previously suggested that higher levels of education, falling smoking rates and better treatment of cardiovascular disease in developed countries could be driving down dementia rates.
There is also the possibility that it is a reporting issue.
At the other end of the scale were New Hampshire (up just 1.3 percent in two decades), Maryland (up 4.5 percent), Massachusetts (up 7.3 percent) and Montana (up 16 percent).
The lower fatality rates from Alzheimer’s were similarly linked to higher standards of living, wealth and healthier lifestyles in the states.
Alzheimer’s is a debilitating condition that gradually robs a sufferer of their memory and personality.
Early warning signs can include parking badly, swearing more often than normal, dressing scruffily and giving out money for free.
But in later stages, sufferers can struggle to form sentences, communicate with others or remember recent events.
Billions have been poured into research into the condition, but doctors are yet to find drugs that can cure the disease — or even what causes it.