A new study has found something both sobering and empowering: where you live can influence your risk of developing dementia. Researchers found that people living in disadvantaged neighborhoods face a higher risk – even when income, education, and occupation are similar to others in better neighborhoods.
That’s not an easy message to hear. But it’s not the end of the story. There are things you can do to protect your brain, actions society must take to fix structural inequities, and lessons the world should heed as populations age.
Why Your ZIP Code Can Affect Your Brain
Scientists from the University of Cambridge discovered that people living in socioeconomically deprived areas show more vascular damage in the brain – the kind that contributes to dementia and cognitive decline.
What’s behind it?
- Higher stress and less access to green space.
- Poorer sleep and higher rates of hypertension.
- Fewer opportunities for exercise or healthy eating.
- Limited healthcare access and social isolation.
In other words: your neighborhood’s environment shapes your daily habits and biological stress load. But that doesn’t mean you’re powerless.
What You Can Still Do, Wherever You Live
You can’t change your ZIP code overnight. But you can change what happens inside it.
1. Move Your Body Daily
Physical activity improves blood flow and helps offset vascular risk. Even walking indoors or dancing to music (you know I’d say that!) can make a measurable difference. A few times over the last couple of years, the inclement weather was not conducive to walking, so I did my 10,000 literally walking around the house in circles!
2. Feed Your Brain
Focus on the Mediterranean diet: colorful produce, lean proteins, olive oil, and less processed food. It’s the most proven “brain-protective” diet.
3. Sleep More and Stress Less
Noise and insecurity raise cortisol, a brain enemy. If your area isn’t restful, try noise-masking apps, deep breathing before bed, or mindfulness playlists. My wife and I use sleep sounds (free version) on Alexa. If you really want to monitor your cardiovascular health and sleep, I’d suggest looking into a WHOOP. I have one and it has changed how I approach sleep and fitness. And no, I am not a paid endorser!
4. Stay Social and Stimulated
Join local groups, volunteer, or – yes – sing. Music activates broad brain networks, boosts mood, and helps you connect. Even a weekly session through my organization, Sage Stream could help. Visiting your local senior center counts, too.
What Society Must Do Next
We talk a lot about “personal responsibility,” but brain health is also a policy issue.
1. Recognize Place as a Health Determinant
Public health strategies must measure and address environmental disadvantage as seriously as blood pressure or cholesterol. Until now many public-health messages emphasize individual behaviors. But the research shows “place” – neighborhood socioeconomic status, housing quality, crime, green-space access – mediates risk for dementia. For example, a University of Wisconsin study found brain shrinkage in residents of disadvantaged areas even when controlling for personal info.
2. Build Brain-Friendly Neighborhoods
That means safe sidewalks, green parks, lighting, noise control, affordable healthy food, and senior-friendly community hubs.
3. Invest Early
The brain starts aging long before retirement. Governments and nonprofits should focus on prevention in midlife and even earlier – especially in lower-income areas.
Why This Matters Globally
Urbanization and inequality are rising everywhere. From London to Lagos to Los Angeles, millions of older adults live in environments that quietly undermine brain health.
If we don’t act now, dementia will rise fastest in the very communities with the fewest resources to handle it. But if we do act – by blending environmental design, social support, and personal empowerment – we can flatten that curve.
It’s not just about living longer. It’s about living well wherever we are.
The Bottom Line
If you’ve ever thought, “Well, my neighborhood isn’t great – what can I do?” the answer is: a lot. Move, engage, connect, and advocate.
And if you’re someone who cares about community – which, reading Sixty and Me, I know you are – push your local leaders to make brain health a public priority.
Because dementia prevention shouldn’t depend on whether you live near a park or a highway. It should depend on how we, collectively, decide to care for one another.
Let’s Have a Conversation:
Where does your neighborhood rate in relation to dementia? Have you considered the benefits you have or lack thereof and how they affect your brain health?