Overview
To examine the effects of a 1-year cluster-randomized controlled intervention of MIND diet on cognitive function among 240 participants with mild cognitive function (MCI) aged 50 years and above from 4 communities.
Description
The current study is a 1-year cluster-randomized controlled intervention trial designed to examine whether the a localized modified Mediterranean-Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) dietary intervention for neurodegenerative delay (MIND) diet will improve cognitive function among 240 participants with MCI from 4 communities. The modified MIND diet recommends 11 brain healthy food groups (green leafy vegetables, dark red and yellow vegetables, other vegetables, nuts, berries, beans, whole grains, seafood, poultry, olive/tea-seed oil and green tea) and limits intake of 4 unhealthy food groups (red meat and products, animal oil, pastries and sweets, and fried/fast food). This study will randomly assign 240 MCI participants to two groups: A) MIND diet intervention group and B) control group, and estimate the cognitive and biological impacts of the 1-year intervention.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- At risk of cognitive decline: cognitive performance at the mean level or slightly lower than expected for age with no dementia (AD8>=3 and/or 5-min MoCA < 11)
- Free of physical disabilities that preclude participation in the study
- Willing to complete all study-related activities for 24 months
- Willing to be randomized to either intervention group
Exclusion Criteria:
- Allergic to more than one type of food (nuts, berries, olive oil, or fish)
- Diagnosed of dementia, severe diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, cancer, thyroid disease, kidney disease, or liver disease
- Diagnosed of major depression or other neuropsychological diseases
- Severe loss of vision, hearing or communicative ability
- Substance abuse within 6 months or heavy alcohol consumption (> 2 drinks/day for women; > 3 drinks/day for men).