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British Columbia

Number of Canadians living with dementia expected to triple by 2050, Alzheimer's society says

A new study from the Alzheimer's Society of Canada predicts that the number of people in Canada living with dementia will triple over the next 30 years.

Health-care system needs to prepare for what may be coming, society CEO says

Close up on hands of older woman working on a jigsaw puzzle.
Dementia is a fatal, degenerative brain disease that eventually makes a person's ability to perform every day tasks impossible. (Robert Kneschke/Shutterstock)

A new study from the Alzheimer's Society of Canada predicts that the number of people in Canada living with dementia will triple over the next 30 years.

The study used data from Statistics Canada to create representations of people living in Canadaand looked at how many of those people would develop dementia over time in what is called a "microsimulation."

In 2020, more than 597,000 Canadians were living with dementia; by 2050, that number is expected to reach 1.7 million.

"As Canada's baby boomer generation continues to age, the number of people in Canada living with dementia will rise significantly," report author Dr. Joshua Armstrong said in a news release.

Statistics Canada data from earlier this year shows the number of people age 65 and older is increasing; there are seven million Canadians in that age category, and they make up about 19 per cent of the total population up from 16.9 per cent since the last census five years prior.

The term dementiadescribes a general group of brain disorders that are progressive, degenerative and, ultimately, terminal.Alzheimer's is the most common form of dementia, but several others fall under this umbrella.

Symptoms of dementia include memory loss, impaired judgment, difficulty problem solvingand a changein behaviour, mood and personality.

Andwhile most people experience some amount of memory loss as they age, the World Health Organization estimates only about eight per cent of people will be diagnosed with dementia.

According to the society, dementia typically affects people over 65, but people in their 40s and 50s can be diagnosed as well.

Jennifer Lyle, the CEO of the Alzheimer's Society of B.C., said the health-care system needs to prepare for what may be coming.

"We know from speaking with families of people who are affected by dementia that access to things like primary care, homecare, respite services, those are critically important," she told On the Coast host Gloria Macarenko.

"And those are things that are oftentimes the first to get cut or impacted when our health-care system comes under stress. So that sort of stuff is really important for future investments."

The Alzheimer's Society of Canada estimates the total costs of caring for people with dementia came in at around $10.4 billion last year alone.

Increased need for caregivers

With an increase in people living with dementia comes an increase in the need for care. The report suggests that in B.C. alone, more than 50,000 friends and family members provided that support in 2020 and this will increase to 144,900 by 2050.

In B.C., the Alzheimer's Society is already strapped for caregiver support volunteers and is actively recruiting.

Amelia Gillies, a support and education co-ordinator with the Alzheimers Society of B.C., said there are 75 different support programs across the province.

"We've now adopted a fully hybrid model, so now we offer all the virtual programs that we started up in COVID, and we're doing in person as well," she said. "So that's dramatically increased our need for volunteers with more programs being offered."

Lyle said about 88 per cent of caregivers are of working ageand could be forced to quit their jobs to care for loved ones,which means the labour force will be impacted by an increase in people living with dementia.

"It's also very much a gendered issue because the majority of people who act as family caregivers are women."

With files from On the Coast and The Early Edition