In his day job, Bryan's research focuses on the epidemiology of Alzheimer's disease, so I wanted to get his take on some common misconceptions about Alzheimer's. Most of us have a family member who has been touched by Alzheimer's or dementia, and my family is no different. Bryan's work focuses on population-level analysis of some of the things that give us "buffering capacity" to delay the onset of dementia, as well as some of the hidden costs of Alzheimer's and dementia that don't always show up in our statistics.
In Bryan's role as a podcast host, he is also an expert communicator about nuanced epidemiological topics and public health. There's a lot to talk about with the litany of public health communication catastrophes we've seen through the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as the descent into epistemic nihilism playing out daily on our social media feeds. Bryan has been wrestling with some of these problems in his own work, so his insight here is invaluable.
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Show Notes:
[01:51] The difference between Alzheimer's disease and dementia — and the role of cognitive reserve capacity in preventing dementia
[13:36] How to determine causality in a multifactorial complex system — and the changes in "prevalence" and "incidence" of Alzheimer's over time
[24:50] What does epidemiology tell us about developing cognitive reserve capacity?
[33:29] Bryan's paper on the correlation between social activity and Alzheimer's
[41:47] Controlling for reverse causality and potential outside causes in epidemiological research
[50:04] The challenges in public health communication and the flaws in the way epidemiology research is presented in the media.
[01:03:24] Misinformation, publicly communicating nuanced topics, combatting epistemic nihilism, and restoring trust in institutions that have made public mistakes
[01:10:10] The Epidemiology Counts podcast and properly weighting the information from observational studies
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