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  4. Advancing brain health equity with Indigenous peoples: A critical imperative

Advancing brain health equity with Indigenous peoples: A critical imperative

Author(s)
Cliff Whetung
Astrid Suchy-Dicey
Adrienne Withall
Kylie Radford
Diane C. Gooding
Louise Lavrencic
Makarena Dudley
Dina Lo Giudice
Leon Flicker
Arantxa Sánchez Boluarte
Sulakshna Aggarwal
Kyle R Conniff
Amy Brodtmann
Mónica María Díaz
Stefanie A Tremblay
Emmanuel S Nwofe
Carey E. Gleason
Kristen Jacklin
Keawe'aimoku Kaholokula J
Chontel Gibson
Juliana Souza-Talarico
Pamela Roach
Date Issued
1 de febrero de 2026
Type
Article
Volume
22
Issue
2
Start Page
e71125
End Page
e71125
DOI
10.1002/alz.71125
Abstract
Indigenous communities hold rich knowledges, cultural practices, and kinship networks that sustain cognitive resilience and nurture brain health across the life course. Yet these enduring strengths are often obscured by biomedical models that overlook the structural determinants of health-including the cumulative effects of colonization, educational inequity, and socioeconomic disadvantage-that diminish brain health. Accordingly, dementia disproportionately affects Indigenous populations globally, often presenting with earlier onset and higher prevalence compared to non-Indigenous groups. This perspective synthesizes the current epidemiological evidence, situates dementia risk within its structural and historical context, and explores how Indigenous knowledges, cultural continuity, and community leadership can inform dementia research and care more broadly. Our global insights call for a decisive shift: to decolonize dementia research and policy and move beyond deficit-based narratives toward approaches that prioritize Indigenous leadership and culturally grounded, strengths-based pathways to brain health equity. HIGHLIGHTS: This perspective synthesizes global evidence on dementia epidemiology among Indigenous populations, examining structural determinants and Indigenous perspectives on brain health and dementia care. Structural inequities and the enduring legacies of colonization, rather than biology alone, underpin the disproportionate dementia burden among Indigenous peoples worldwide. Centering culture, kinship, and connection to land and community reframes brain health beyond biomedical models and reveals cultural resilience as a powerful neuroprotective resource. Key recommendations call for Indigenous leadership and locally tailored, culturally grounded approaches to advance lifelong brain health equity and develop strengths-based models of dementia care.
Subjects

Indigenous

Dementia

Health equity

Psychological resilie...

Economic growth

Equity (law)

Sociology

Health care

Mental health

Perspective (graphica...

Socioeconomic status

Life course approach

Political science

Nature versus nurture...

Social determinants o...

Medicine

Psychology

Transformative learni...

Grounded theory

Gerontology

Global health

Environmental ethics

Public relations

Public health

Health policy

Epidemiology

Cognitive decline

Conceptual framework

Indigenous

Dementia

Health equity

Psychological resilie...

Equity (law)

Health care

Mental health

Perspective (graphica...

Health Equity

Health Equity

Health Equity

Health Equity

Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Peoples

Brain

Brain

Brain

Brain

Dementia ethnology

Dementia ethnology

Dementia ethnology

Dementia ethnology

Dementia epidemiology...

Dementia epidemiology...

Dementia epidemiology...

Dementia epidemiology...

Humans

Humans

Humans

Humans

Social Sciences Socia...

Health Sciences Healt...

Health Sciences Healt...

Metrics
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