Starting this eating plan later in life dramatically slashes dementia risk, new research reveals
The Diet That Could Change Everything About Aging
It is never too late to eat your way to a sharper mind. That is the striking takeaway from new research on the MIND diet — a brain-targeted eating plan that, even when adopted in middle age or beyond, significantly lowers the risk of Alzheimer’s disease and related forms of dementia.
The findings, presented Monday at the American Society for Nutrition’s annual meeting, analyzed data from nearly 93,000 American adults between the ages of 45 and 75, with observations beginning in the 1990s. The results are among the most compelling yet to support the idea that dietary choices in the second half of life are far from futile — they may, in fact, be among the most powerful tools available for protecting cognitive health.
What Is the MIND Diet?
The MIND diet — short for Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay — blends the most brain-beneficial elements of two well-established eating patterns: the Mediterranean diet and the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension). Where the Mediterranean diet broadly champions whole foods and healthy fats, and DASH focuses on reducing blood pressure, the MIND diet zeroes in on the brain specifically.
Its foundation rests on a core group of foods that research has repeatedly linked to cognitive resilience:
- Leafy green vegetables (at least six servings per week)
- Other vegetables
- Berries, particularly blueberries and strawberries
- Nuts
- Olive oil
- Whole grains
- Fish
- Beans
- Poultry
- A limited amount of wine
Processed foods, red meat, butter, cheese, pastries, and fried food are largely restricted under the plan.
The Numbers Behind the MIND Diet
The study’s findings are hard to ignore. Participants who closely followed the MIND diet showed a 9% lower risk of dementia compared to those with low adherence. But the most arresting statistic comes from participants who improved their adherence over a 10-year period — even those who had not closely followed the diet at the outset. That group saw a 25% lower risk of dementia compared to those whose dietary habits declined over time.
The research adds urgency to public health conversations at a moment when nearly 7.2 million Americans are currently living with Alzheimer’s disease, the most common form of dementia, according to the Alzheimer’s Association. That number is expected to grow significantly in the decades ahead as the population ages.
Leafy Greens Emerge as the Standout MIND Food
Among the individual components of the MIND diet, leafy green vegetables consistently rise to the top in scientific analysis. A landmark 2023 study published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, found that people who followed the Mediterranean or MIND diets showed fewer biological signs of Alzheimer’s disease in their brain tissue — specifically, reduced deposits of amyloid plaques, a hallmark marker of the disease.
Researchers from Rush University in Chicago identified a particularly striking correlation in that study: people who consumed the highest amounts of leafy greens — roughly seven or more servings per week — had brain plaque levels corresponding to being nearly 19 years younger than those who ate one or fewer servings weekly. That is not a marginal difference. That is a generational one.
Why Starting Late Still Matters
Perhaps the most humanizing aspect of the new research is its central message: it is not too late. The study’s lead researcher, an associate professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, noted that healthy dietary patterns in mid-to-late life — and crucially, the improvement of those patterns over time — may actively prevent Alzheimer’s and related dementias. The implication is significant for the millions of Americans who may have spent decades eating poorly and now wonder whether the damage is already done.
The evidence increasingly says otherwise. The brain, it turns out, is still listening — even at 60, even at 70 — to what you put on your plate.
Source: CBS News

