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Can Your Job Protect You From Dementia?

can you job protect your from dementia

Photo Illustration by Joules Garcia for Verywell Health; Getty Images

Key Takeaways

  • A new study indicates that people with cognitively demanding jobs have a lower risk of cognitive decline and dementia compared to those in routine roles.
  • Engaging in mentally stimulating activities builds a cognitive reserve, which can adapt to changes related to Alzheimer’s and potentially delay dementia symptoms.
  • Learning new skills, maintaining social connections, and physical health care are also vital in reducing dementia risk, experts say.

Your job might protect you from cognitive decline later in life, especially if it requires a lot of brain power.

A new study found that routine jobs, such as those of mail carriers and road workers, are associated with a 66% greater risk of cognitive decline and a 37% higher chance of dementia compared to more cognitively stimulating jobs.

Researchers analyzed data from over 7,000 people in Norway and learned that people engaged in mentally stimulating jobs in their 30s, 40s, 50s, and 60s were less likely to experience cognitive decline in their 70s.

“If you use your brain, you’re not going to lose your brain,” said Dorene M. Rentz, PsyD, a professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School who was not involved in the study.

Jobs that involve mental stimulation, including those in education and engineering, may help build a cognitive reserve that protects against cognitive decline. This reserve may allow people to adapt to Alzheimer’s-related brain changes and potentially delay or avoid the onset of dementia symptoms.

“The whole idea is that there are extra neuronal connections or pathways that the brain utilizes to perform a task. If you have additional brain networks, and one isn’t working, then it goes over and finds another one in order to be able to complete a task appropriately,” Rentz said.

The new study suggests that mentally challenging jobs can help build cognitive reserve, but that doesn’t mean physical laborers or retired people are out of luck.

“Our study shows that it is never too late—or a waste of time—to start learning something new. All cognitively demanding activities later in life contribute to strengthening one’s cognitive reserve,” said Trine Holt Edwin, MD, PhD, an author of the new study and a researcher in geriatric medicine at Oslo University Hospital.

Work isn’t the only solution to protecting your brain. Activities such as learning to play a musical instrument, taking a dance class, reading, writing, or solving word or math puzzles can all help stimulate the brain.

“The ideal circumstance is that throughout life, you’re stimulating and building those networks,” said Michael Rosenbloom, MD, FAAN, an associate professor of neurology and a behavioral neurologist with UW Medicine’s Memory and Brain Wellness Center.

Even having a graduate degree doesn’t fully protect your brain if you’re not continually engaged in “intellectually stimulated” activities, Rosenbloom added.

There is no proven treatment or preventative therapy for dementia, and some risk factors, like age, genetics, and social determinants of health, are hard or impossible to control. Most experts recommend focusing on the lifestyle changes you can control to reduce your risk.

In addition to mental stimulation, staying physically active, eating a healthy diet, and taking care of your physical and mental health are also crucial. Researchers have linked social isolation with an almost 50% increased risk of dementia, so it’s essential to maintain social connections as you age.

“It’s more than just stimulating activities; you need all these other components to optimize brain function,” Rentz said.

What This Means For You

While having a mentally stimulating job may help lower your risk of cognitive decline, you can get similar stimulation outside of the workplace. Learning new skills or getting new experiences consistently can also help stimulate the brain.

8 Sources
Verywell Health uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Edwin TH, Håberg AK, Zotcheva E, et al. Trajectories of occupational cognitive demands and risk of mild cognitive impairment and dementia in later life: the HUNT4 70+ study. Neurology. 2024;102(9):e209353. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000209353

  2. Harvard Health Publishing. What is cognitive reserve?

  3. Noice T, Noice H, Kramer AF. Participatory arts for older adults: a review of benefits and challenges. Gerontologist. 2014;54(5):741-753. doi:10.1093/geront/gnt138

  4. Harvard Health Publishing. 12 Ways to keep your brain young.

  5. Stanford Medicine Health Care. Dementia risk factors.

  6. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Social determinants of health and Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.

  7. National Institute on Aging. Can I prevent dementia?.

  8. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Loneliness and social isolation linked to serious health conditions.

Stephanie Brown

By Stephanie Brown
Brown is a nutrition writer who received her Didactic Program in Dietetics certification from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Previously, she worked as a nutrition educator and culinary instructor in New York City.