Overview
Dementia is a significant and growing health and aged care issue in Australia that has a substantial impact on the health and quality of life of people with the condition, as well as for their family and friends.
Dementia is a term used to describe a group of similar conditions characterised by gradual impairment of brain function. Changes due to the condition may affect memory, speech, cognition (thought), behaviour, mobility and an individual’s personality, and their health and functional ability decline as the disease progresses.
Dementia is a term used to describe a group of similar conditions characterised by gradual impairment of brain function. Changes due to the condition may affect memory but also speech, cognition (thought), behaviour, mobility and an individual’s personality, and their health and functional ability decline as the disease progresses. Having multiple types of dementia at once is common and is referred to as ‘mixed dementia’. Other main types of dementia are Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies, and frontotemporal dementia. Dementia is also associated with other conditions (such as Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease and Down syndrome), prolonged substance abuse and severe brain injuries.
Dementia is a progressively fatal condition. As dementia progresses and a person’s care needs become greater, carers provide essential support to people with dementia in almost all aspects of their daily living. Family and friends provide a substantial amount of care for people with dementia who live in the community, as well as those who are living in permanent residential aged care facilities.
Age is the biggest risk factor for dementia, and the number of Australians living with dementia is projected to increase with more Australians living to older ages.
There are a number of lifestyle factors which may increase your risk of developing dementia (such as physical inactivity, obesity in mid-life, excessive alcohol consumption, social isolation, and tobacco smoking) as well as some health conditions. As there is currently no known cure for dementia, managing these risks at a population level is the best way to prevent and manage dementia. For people with Alzheimer’s disease, there are also 4 medications (Donepezil, Galantamine, Rivastigmine, and Memantine) available under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) and Repatriation Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (RPBS; for war veterans and their dependants) that may help to manage symptoms and slow dementia progression.
This topic presents reports and statistics that are specifically focused on dementia, but additional information on dementia can be found under Aged care, Older people and Palliative care services.
The latest information on dementia
The Dementia in Australia report is Australia’s largest online compendium of national dementia statistics and provides the most up-to-date data on dementia, including:
- Understanding dementia, including how dementia is diagnosed, risk factors, types of dementia and available care and support services
- Population health impacts of dementia, including prevalence, deaths and burden of disease
- Carers and care needs of people with dementia
- Health services used by people with dementia, including GP and specialist services, prescriptions for dementia-specific medications and hospital care
- Aged care and support services used by people with dementia
- Dementia amongst First Nations people, including population health impacts, burden of disease, hospital care and aged care service use
- Dementia in priority groups, including people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, veterans, people with intellectual disabilities, people living with childhood dementia or younger onset dementia, and the LGBTIQ+ community
- Health and aged care expenditure on dementia
- Behaviours and psychological symptoms of dementia
- National policy response to dementia.
The online report also presents five Australian stories about living with dementia and/or caring for a loved one with dementia.
The Dementia in Australia report was launched in Dementia Action Week 2021 by the Minister for Senior Australians and Aged Care Services and Minister for Sport, Senator the Hon. Richard Colbeck. View the minister's message.
The AIHW National Centre for Monitoring Dementia was established in 2021 to monitor dementia and undertake work to address existing data gaps and inform specific policy needs in relation to dementia in Australia.
Work underway includes:
- updating the 2023 National Dementia Data Improvement Plan to reflect new data developments
- designing indicators to monitor the National Dementia Action Plan (currently in development)
- promoting the Dementia National Best Practice Data Set, which provides recommendations for collecting dementia data in Australia
- assessing new self-reported dementia data from the 2021 Census.
We collaborate and consult with data custodians, government agencies, service providers and researchers to improve the collection and quality of existing data. We also use linked data assets and develop new analytical approaches to fill existing data gaps.
The AIHW National Centre for Monitoring Dementia is funded by the Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care.
Need more information?
If you require more information about dementia, want to know where to seek help if dementia is suspected or want to find out about available support services refer to:
- Dementia Australia website
- The Dementia Guide by Dementia Australia
- National Dementia Helpline: 1800 100 500 (a free and confidential service to discuss dementia and memory loss concerns for yourself or others).
- Dementia Behaviour Management Advisory Service: 1800 699 799 (if needing help to manage behaviour associated with dementia)
- My Aged Care website (for information on, and applying for access to government-subsidised aged care services).
Featured reports
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Dementia in Australia
Web report |
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Dementia Awareness Survey
Web report |
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National Dementia Data Improvement Plan 2023–2033
Web report |
Latest findings
In 2023, it is estimated that 411,100 Australians are living with dementia
Dementia was the 2nd leading cause of death in Australia in 2022
Australians with lower incomes or education, or no personal experience with dementia know less about dementia
Australians generally do not know that certain behaviours they adopt may reduce their risk of dementia
The aim is to deliver better data to improve outcomes for people with dementia and their carers
Goal 2: National dementia data available and reported regularly in key monitoring areas