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Dementia Diagnosis Can Take 3.5 Years, Reveals A Study, Don’t Ignore These 9 Silent Red Flags In Loved Ones
When your loved one forgets names, repeats the same stories, or suddenly struggles with daily routines, you may sense something is off-but getting a clear answer can take years.
A recent study published in the International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry confirms what many families painfully experience: dementia takes, on average, 3.5 years to be diagnosed after symptoms first appear. That's nearly four years of uncertainty, confusion, and missed chances for early support.

Conducted by researchers at University College London (UCL), the review analysed data from over 30,257 individuals across Europe, the U.S., Australia, and China, revealing not just how long the delays are, but how widespread the issue is. People with early-onset dementia (under 65) often wait even longer, up to 4.1 years, while those with frontotemporal dementia face some of the longest diagnostic delays of all.
"Timely diagnosis of dementia remains a major global challenge, shaped by a complex set of factors, and specific health care strategies are urgently needed to improve it. Timely diagnosis can improve access to treatments and, for some people, prolong the time living with mild dementia before symptoms worsen," said lead author Dr. Vasiliki Orgeta from the Division of Psychiatry at UCL.
Early signs of dementia are subtle, easy to miss, and often mistaken for stress, tiredness, or just "being old." But recognising these early symptoms can make all the difference in accessing timely care, planning ahead, and improving quality of life.
Here are 9 early signs you should never ignore in yourself or someone close to you.
1. Short-Term Memory Loss That Affects Daily Life
Everyone forgets where they left the keys once in a while. But if it becomes a regular pattern-missing appointments, forgetting conversations, or asking the same question multiple times-it could be a red flag. Memory lapses in dementia are more frequent and disruptive.
2. Difficulty Performing Familiar Tasks
Is your loved one suddenly unsure how to cook a dish they've made for decades? Are they getting confused while using the TV remote or paying bills? Difficulty with routine activities is one of the earliest signs of cognitive decline.
3. Trouble Finding The Right Words
Struggling to recall common words, describing objects instead of naming them ("the thing you write with" instead of "pen"), or pausing frequently mid-sentence could be early signs of dementia-related language decline.
4. Getting Lost In Familiar Places
If someone begins to lose their sense of direction, even in their own neighborhood, or has trouble following a map or driving routes they've taken for years, this could be a serious warning signal.
5. Poor Judgment And Risky Decisions
People in early stages of dementia may make unusual decisions-such as dressing inappropriately for the weather, giving away large sums of money, or falling for obvious scams. Impaired judgment can put their safety and finances at risk.
6. Changes In Mood Or Personality
Sudden mood swings, withdrawal from social activities, increased anxiety, or even uncharacteristic irritability could be more than emotional stress-they could indicate neurological changes. Pay attention if someone's demeanour shifts dramatically without a clear reason.
7. Problems With Planning Or Concentrating
Tasks that require focus-like following a recipe, managing finances, or organizing a trip-can become overwhelming for someone in the early stages of dementia. They may get distracted easily, lose track of steps, or abandon tasks altogether.
8. Misplacing Things And Inability To Retrace Steps
If someone constantly misplaces their belongings and accuses others of stealing them, it could be due to impaired memory and spatial reasoning. This sign is often mistaken for paranoia but is actually a common symptom.
9. Withdrawing From Work Or Social Activities
Someone who once enjoyed social gatherings, hobbies, or group conversations might start to withdraw or avoid them altogether. The fear of making mistakes or not understanding what's going on can lead to isolation and depression.
Why Early Detection Matters
Dementia isn't curable yet, but early diagnosis opens the door to medical treatment, lifestyle interventions, and support systems that can slow progression. It also allows families to make critical legal, financial, and emotional decisions before the disease takes full control. If you notice even a few of these symptoms, encourage your loved one to consult a neurologist or geriatric specialist immediately.
Dementia doesn't announce itself loudly. It creeps in softly-through forgotten names, confused expressions, or lost routines. While a diagnosis may take years, awareness doesn't have to. Recognising these early signs can help you protect your loved ones from years of uncertainty, misdiagnosis, or being dismissed. Because when it comes to dementia, time isn't just money, it's memory, identity, and dignity.



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