CABBIES are less likely to die from Alzheimer’s as driving keeps their brain sharp, a study shows.
Scientists found taxi and ambulance drivers had below-average mortality rates from the disease.
Alzheimer’s is significantly less likely to kill people who do two specific jobs, a major study has revealed[/caption]They believe it is because mentally calculating routes keeps a vital part of the brain strong into old age.
Analysis of US death records found that cabbies’ Alzheimer’s death rate was 1.03 per cent, compared with the national average of 3.9 per cent.
And ambulance drivers had an even lower rate, at just 0.74 per cent.
Dr Anupam Jena, of Harvard University in the US, said: “Frequent navigational and spacial processing tasks may be associated with some protection.”
A previous study found that London black cab drivers have an especially powerful hippocampus — a part of the brain that helps support memory.
Too little mental stimulation is known to raise the risk of Alzheimer’s, the leading cause of dementia.
But Prof Tara Spires-Jones, of the UK Dementia Research Institute, said: “The age at death of taxi and ambulance drivers in this study was around 64 to 67 years, while for all other occupations it was 74.
“They might have gone on to develop Alzheimer’s if they lived longer.”
There are things you can do to reduce your own risk of developing dementia, including Alzheimer's.
No single behaviour is guaranteed to prevent dementia – but there’s lots of evidence to suggest that making tweaks to your lifestyle choices could affect your risk.
Dementia risk is lowest in people who have healthy behaviours in mid-life – from the age of 40 to 65 – according Alzheimer’s Society.
Here are a few easy changes you can make:
Source: Alzheimer’s Society