A WORLD-first dementia study is looking to recruit 10,000 Tasmanians to help prevent the degenerative disease.
The Tasmanian project will be largest dementia study of its kind in the world and is being run by the Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre.
The ISLAND (Island Study Linking Ageing and Neurodegenerative Disease) Project is looking to engage Tasmanians aged 50 in a bid to slash the state's dementia rates.
The long-term project will look at who is most at risk of the condition and how they can potentially self-manage risk behaviours to build resilience to dementia using diet, exercise, improving social contact or pursuing further education.
Participants will be asked to take part in a range of activities including surveys, online courses and medical testing.
Wicking Dementia Centre Director Professor James Vickers said the project is the first in the world to target a whole population through a public health and educational campaign.
"Age is the biggest risk factor for dementia, and Tasmania has the oldest population in the country which is ageing faster than the national average," he said.
"Tasmania also has high rates of modifiable risk factors of dementia; however it has been estimated that a third of dementia cases may be prevented if the population can attend to these risk factors."
The ISLAND Project aims to develop a toolbox to assist participants in monitoring dementia risk factors and behaviours, and will establish a state-wide registry to track the incidence of dementia.
The registry will also assist in understanding the impact of dementia across the health system in Tasmania.
"The project will provide strategies for individuals and communities to promote and engage in activities to improve many dementia risk factors," Professor Vickers said.
It will combine engagement in the successful Wicking Dementia Centre's Preventing Dementia MOOC (Massive Open Online Course), with a variety of community co-developed and led programs to educate the community about modifiable factors that could potentially lower the risk of dementia.
The project will also see participants engage in a range of ancillary research studies to identify those at most risk of dementia through a combination of like factors, for example resilience, genetics, biomarkers, health data surveys and clinic activity studies.
The Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre is part of the University of Tasmania's College of Health and Medicine.
Specific components of the ISLAND Project have been initially funded by the Medical Research Future Fund and the National Health and Medical Research Council.
For more information about the project click HERE