12/20/2022
7 Signs Santa Has Alzheimer's
Doctors know well that the holidays bring an upturn in families noticing worrisome signs of memory loss in older adults. No disrespect to Santa intended, but Jolly Old St. Nick also shows a worrisome number of not-so-jolly potential symptoms of dementia.
Only a doctor, of course, can diagnose Alzheimer's disease. But Mrs. Claus would do well to take a closer look at the following warning signs, which warrant a cognitive evaluation and medical exam in order to rule out other possible causes of dementia
1. Santa keeps making that list and checking it twice - Why does Santa check his list twice? Maybe he's just careful -- after all, it's a long list. But obsessively checking and rechecking a note or the clock -- often because you literally can't remember just having done so -- is a common sign of memory loss. The ability to record these new memories is impaired
2. He wears the same clothes over and over - Have you ever seen Santa wearing anything besides that fur-trimmed red suit? Wearing the same clothes repeatedly is another hallmark of advancing cognitive difficulty.
3. He needs a red-nosed reindeer to direct him on the same route he's driven for years - You'd think Santa would know his worldwide sky routes like the back of his hand by now, instead of having to seek out a bright-nosed reindeer to lead the way.
4. He's getting up there in years - Alzheimer's disease isn't an inevitable side effect of aging. But the odds of developing it do increase with age. As many as one in two people over age 85 have signs of dementia. And Santa is how old? Multiple centuries?
5. He asks the same questions over and over. ("What do you want for Christmas?" "Have you been a good little girl?") - Spend a few minutes with someone with mild dementia, and repetition -- of questions, comments, and even word-for-word long anecdotes -- is often apparent. The person may seem to get stuck on just a few phrases with certain people or in certain situations. Always asking a grandchild, "How's school?" or an adult child, "How's the family?" for example, are helpful crutches that the person with mild dementia may use to mask an underlying uncertainty.
6. He's obese - The exact cause of Alzheimer's is unknown. But scientists have uncovered plenty of risk factors. High on the list: obesity. Santa's exact weight is unknown, but nobody looking at that bowl full of shaking jelly would place him inside the "normal" columns of the body-mass-index chart. People who are obese also tend to develop diabetes and heart disease, which are themselves linked to a higher risk of dementia.
7. He's prone to mistaking the chimney for a door, and to calling musical instruments "rooty-toot-toots and rummy-tum-tums."
It's hard to understand why Santa chooses to use the chimney over the door, given that everyone's supposed to be asleep anyway and given how often he flops into fires and ashes. But cognitive difficulties often cause confusion in behavior and language.
Here's hoping those hardworking toymaker elves are also good at caregiving, since -- as far as we know -- Mr. and Mrs. Claus have no children of their own up at the Pole to step up to the demands of the job.