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Researching the Research

There is no shortage of claims of what may prevent, alleviate, or slow down dementia. It can be very difficult to sift through what is truth, what is half-truth. and what is fraud.

Enter Google Scholar, your search engine within a search engine that will search the primary sources of the popular articles found in the media.

Type in https://scholar.google.com/. Add search terms, such as “coconut oil and dementia.” Read the articles that catch your attention.

A frustration of scientific literature is that many scientific articles are behind a paywall, that is, you have to pay a publisher to access the full article. A mentor of mine said in a presentation to an audience of scientists, “If you want to almost guarantee that your research will not be read, publish it in a journal.” For some though, it is ‘write articles or lose funding.’

While researchers usually need the full articles for a review (and their university or hospital can afford it), you can likely learn enough from the “abstract.” The abstract is a paragraph that summarizes the major parts of a peer-reviewed article: hypothesis, what population was studied, methods, results, discussion., and limitations. If you search enough places, you may even find the full article at https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ of the National Library of Medicine.

The information can help you to be an informed customer and patient. When you ask your doctor about a certain ingredient in a supplement store, you can show them the article or abstract and ask their opinion. This method is more likely to initiate a conversation rather than putting the doctor on the spot. It also demonstrates that you research from reliable resources. I once asked my primary doctor about a supplement and offered some key findings of an article. His response? “Sounds interesting. I don’t see any harm in you trying it out.” Remember safety is important, but you will also have to consider the out-of-pocket cost and chance of benefit.

Articles can also be found on non-drug therapies, what activities may work best in the home, preventative diets, and caregiver burden.

Give it a try on something on caregiving or another topic.

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