Taiwan's Dementia Growth Rate Outpaces Global Average by 1.5 Times; High-Risk Vascular Type is Key

Key facts

  • Taiwan's Dementia Growth Rate Outpaces Global Average by 1.5 Times; High-Risk Vascular Type is Key
  • The prevalence and growth rate of dementia in Taiwan are estimated to be about 1.5 times higher than the global average. Psychiatrist Dr. Yang Tsung-tsai points out that in addition to rapid population aging, the uniquely high-risk "vascular dementia" in Taiwan is a key factor, linked to a dietary culture of high salt and sugar, and the prevalence of lifestyle diseases. He emphasizes that daily habits such as lack of exercise, poor diet, social isolation, chronic stress, and over-reliance on digital devices are accelerating brain aging. Dr. Yang advises middle-aged individuals to actively prevent dementia through regular exercise, a Mediterranean diet, adequate sleep, continuous brain use, and managing chronic diseases.
  • Source: PR Times
  • Date: June 7, 2026

Direct answer

The prevalence and growth rate of dementia in Taiwan are estimated to be about 1.5 times higher than the global average. Psychiatrist Dr. Yang Tsung-tsai points out that in addition to rapid population aging, the uniquely high-risk "vascular dementia" in Taiwan is a key factor, linked to a dietary culture of high salt and sugar, and the prevalence of lifestyle diseases. He emphasizes that daily habits such as lack of exercise, poor diet, social isolation, chronic stress, and over-reliance on digital devices are accelerating brain aging. Dr. Yang advises middle-aged individuals to actively prevent dementia through regular exercise, a Mediterranean diet, adequate sleep, continuous brain use, and managing chronic diseases.

Citation
Taiwan's Dementia Growth Rate Outpaces Global Average by 1.5 Times; High-Risk Vascular Type is Key (June 7, 2026), PR Times
Source
PR Times
Date
June 7, 2026
The prevalence and growth rate of dementia in Taiwan are estimated to be about 1.5 times higher than the global average. Psychiatrist Dr. Yang Tsung-tsai points out that in addition to rapid population aging, the uniquely high-risk "vascular dementia" in Taiwan is a key factor, linked to a dietary culture of high salt and sugar, and the prevalence of lifestyle diseases. He emphasizes that daily habits such as lack of exercise, poor diet, social isolation, chronic stress, and over-reliance on digital devices are accelerating brain aging. Dr. Yang advises middle-aged individuals to actively prevent dementia through regular exercise, a Mediterranean diet, adequate sleep, continuous brain use, and managing chronic diseases.
社會NQ 79/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: June 7, 2026 at 15:54
  • 🔍 Collected: June 7, 2026 at 16:10 (16 min after Published)
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 7, 2026 at 16:16 (5 min after Collected)
(CNA, Reporter Chen Chieh-ling, Taipei, 7th) The prevalence and growth rate of dementia in Taiwan are considered to be about 1.5 times higher than the global average. Doctors believe this is the result of multiple overlapping factors, including Taiwan's rapid population aging, which is among the fastest in the world, and particularly the extremely high risk of vascular dementia, which has become a crucial key.

In recent years, as many celebrities have been reported to have dementia, Dr. Yang Tsung-tsai, a psychiatrist at a private clinic, explained to the media in writing today that Taiwan is entering a super-aged society at an extremely fast pace, but healthy life expectancy has not increased in tandem. This means people are living longer, but the period of brain degeneration is also longer. Coupled with the accumulation of more chronic diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, and cerebrovascular disease, these are all direct causes of dementia.

Dr. Yang said that the risk of vascular dementia in Taiwan is extremely high, which is a unique and important key. A large proportion of dementia in Taiwan is of a mixed type, meaning Alzheimer's combined with vascular dementia, and the proportion of pure vascular dementia is also high. The reasons stem from a high-salt dining-out culture, a high-sugar hand-shaken drink culture, and the high prevalence of the "three highs" (hypertension, hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia). Vascular degeneration progresses faster than Alzheimer's.

In addition to the "superficial increase" caused by medical advances leading to more dementia diagnoses, Dr. Yang stated that Taiwan's long-term high-competition environment, such as a high-work-hour society and mid-life stress, also plays a role. Chronic stress leads to long-term elevated cortisol, atrophy of the hippocampus (the memory center), and a sedentary lifestyle with insufficient exercise, all of which decrease brain blood flow, weaken neuroplasticity, and cause the brain to age prematurely.

Dr. Yang reminds that, besides aging, what truly accelerates dementia are daily habits. Lack of exercise is the most underestimated risk. Common dietary risks in Taiwan, such as high-fat, high-sugar, and high-salt fried foods, sugary drinks, and processed foods, are invisible killers. Social isolation is quiet yet deadly; clinical studies have found that loneliness itself is a risk factor for dementia.

Furthermore, excessive reliance on digital devices is also a risk factor for dementia. Dr. Yang said the modern problem is not remembering phone numbers, relying solely on smartphone contact lists; not remembering routes, depending entirely on GPS navigation; and not thinking, using search engines instead of brainpower. When brain usage decreases and cognitive reserve is reduced, the ability to resist dementia declines.

"Ignoring hearing and vision decline is very dangerous," Dr. Yang stated. Most people do not know that hearing loss is one of the important risk factors for dementia. The brain needs to expend more resources to understand sound, increasing the cognitive load. The medical relationship between sleep and dementia is one of the most important breakthroughs in research in the last decade; only during deep sleep does the cerebrospinal fluid flow and clear out toxins.

Dr. Yang recommends for the 40-50 age group that exercise is the strongest "anti-dementia drug," with 150 minutes of aerobic exercise per week, supplemented by weight training. For diet, choose the Mediterranean diet. Sleep 7-8 hours per night. Continuously use the brain by learning new skills like languages or musical instruments, or through reading and thinking. Maintain social connections and control chronic diseases to also prevent dementia. (Editor: Wu Su-jou) 1150607

FAQ

為什麼台灣的失智症成長速度被認為比全球快?

根據醫師分析,主要原因是台灣人口老化速度快,加上特有的「血管型失智症」風險極高。後者與高鹽外食、高糖手搖飲文化及三高疾病(高血壓、高血糖、高血脂)的普遍盛行密切相關。

醫師點出哪些日常習慣會加速失智風險?

加速失智的習慣包括:缺乏運動、常吃高油高糖高鹽的食物(如炸物、含糖飲)、社交孤立、長期處於高工時與高壓環境,以及過度依賴手機通訊錄、GPS導航和搜尋引擎,導致大腦使用量下降。

除了阿茲海默症,台灣還有哪種特有的高風險失智症類型?

台灣有很高比例的「血管型失智症」及混合型失智(阿茲海默症合併血管型)。血管型失智症源於腦血管病變,其退化速度甚至比阿茲海默症更快。

醫師建議如何有效預防失智症?

建議40至50歲族群,每週進行150分鐘有氧運動及重量訓練,採地中海飲食,每晚睡7至8小時,透過學習新技能(如語言、樂器)持續用腦,維持社交連結,並妥善控制高血壓等慢性病。

聽力或睡眠問題與失智症有關嗎?

是的。聽力損失是失智症的重要危險因子,因為大腦需耗費更多資源去理解聲音。此外,深度睡眠是清除大腦毒素的關鍵時期,睡眠不足會增加失智風險。