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Dalton L. Wolfe
Dalton L. Wolfe, PhD
Lawson Scientist, Parkwood Institute Research
Implementation Science and Education; Spinal Cord Injury
Dalton Wolfe is a Scientist at Lawson Health Research Institute, an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Health Science and leads the Research 2 Practice (R2P) team, which is a unique research program within Parkwood Institute that focuses on strategies for generating evidence and implementing best practice within rehabilitation. Professor Wolfe’s primary research interest is in the area of knowledge mobilization and best practice implementation with a focus on physical activity and activity-based therapies in spinal cord injury and brain injury rehabilitation.
Professor Wolf also co-leads the Ontario SCI Implementation, Evaluation and Quality Care Consortium, which focuses on implementation of quality indicators towards the enhancement of care across the 5 academic health centres involved in SCI rehabilitation in Ontario. As part of the Parkwood Rehabilitation Innovations in Mobility Enhancement initiative (PRIME), Professor Wolfe is focused on enhancing clinical decision-making to improve locomotor and other movement-related outcomes with activity-based therapies such as robotic, manual and FES-assisted therapies. As with many of the R2P initiatives this involves implementation science and participatory research methods to put in place practice-based research infrastructure that enables iterative knowledge generation as well as implementation. Trainees work alongside clinicians, administrators and persons with lived experience to tackle clinically relevant questions.
Dementia doesn’t have to be your destiny
Tackling a “dirty dozen” list of health and lifestyle factors can go a long way in lowering the risk of dementia, say London experts.
Many people could greatly improve their odds against developing dementia by making four, low-cost lifestyle changes – today.
In the first study of its kind, researchers at Lawson Research Institute (Lawson) and Western University have found that about half of dementia cases in Canada can be influenced by 12 lifestyle factors.
Topping the “dirty dozen” list across Canadians’ lifespan, and especially notable from mid-life onwards, are physical inactivity, hearing loss, obesity and hypertension.
The solutions:
- Get off the couch and get moving
- Tackle hearing loss early
- Lose weight
- Get assessed and treated for high blood pressure
“While lifestyle changes aren’t a magic pill to prevent all dementias, they’re an empowering way to reduce the overall risk,” says Lawson researcher and study lead author, Surim Son, a Western University PhD candidate who with the dementia research program at St. Joseph’s Health Care London (St. Joseph’s).
“We’re talking about significant benefits to Canadian health and health systems,” adds Son.
The findings could also have profound implications in refocusing health policy priorities. The Public Health Agency of Canada is already highlighting the study as part of its resources for national health policy advisors, she notes.
This study is the first to weigh Canadians’ lifestyles and habits against 12 potentially modifiable risk factors for dementia, and the first globally to include sleep disruption on the list.
Son’s paper, published in The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease, builds on a 2017 study in the Lancet that shows 12 modifiable risk factors throughout the course of life could contribute to 40 per cent of dementias around the world.
But Canada’s numbers are considerably higher because more of us indulge in weightier lifestyle risks. For example, four of every five older Canadian adults don’t exercise regularly; one in three is obese or has hypertension; and one in five has hearing loss.
"If half of the dementia cases in Canada are linked to modifiable lifestyle risk factors, this suggests that, today, prevention may be the most effective form of treatment," says Dr. Manuel Montero-Odasso, co-author of the paper and Director of the Brain & Gait Lab at St. Joseph’s Parkwood Institute.
“Dementia doesn’t have to be your destiny, even if that’s part of your genetic story. Our results from the SYNERGIC Trial shows almost everyone can change their risk factors and improve their cognitive resilience,” says Montero-Odasso, who was recently awarded a $2.4-million Canadian Institutes of Health Research grant to train professionals in risk reduction and care for people living with cognitive impairment.
Montero-Odasso’s advice: “Go out for a walk and keep moving. Get a hearing assessment. Keep your blood pressure in check. It’s low-cost and easy to implement. It’s good for your body health, even beyond improving your brain health and reducing your dementia risk.”
The 12 potential modifiable factors (based on a study of 30,000 Canadians over the age of 45), weighted from most significant factor to least:
- Physical inactivity
- Hearing loss
- Obesity
- Hypertension
- Traumatic brain injury
- Depression
- Less education in early life
- Sleep disturbances
- Diabetes
- Smoking
- Excessive alcohol
- Social isolation
Department of Psychiatry Academic Research Day
Please join us at the annual Department of Psychiatry Academic Research Day on June 22, 2017 at Parkwood Institute, Mental Health Care Building (Auditorium and Gymnasium).
Learn more about research being carried out in the Department of Psychiatry concerning mental health service delivery, diagnosis, and more. This event includes oral and poster presentations from faculty, clinicians, researchers, trainees and students in the Department of Psychiatry at Western University and affiliated departments and research institutes. Breakfast, lunch, and refreshments provided.
Registration is free of charge.
Please contact Lindsay Cecile at @email or 519-685-8500 x74911 to confirm your attendance.
We look forward to seeing you there!