01The Goal

Keep memory, attention, and thinking strong across a lifetime

The goal is to safely preserve healthy cognition for life — keeping memory, attention, and thinking sharp, and stopping the slow erosion of normal cognitive aging before it ever narrows a person’s life — creating no new health problems. Prevention of loss, not management of decline. Each lever below names the evidence and the people behind it.

02Why This Matters

Most people fear losing their mind more than almost anything else about aging. Long before dementia, normal cognitive aging quietly chips away at memory and speed — shaping when people stop driving, working, and living independently. But cognitive aging is not a fixed fate: much of it is driven by factors that can be protected, and the brain’s resilience can be built and maintained. Preserving cognition is the prevention end of the brain-health spectrum — keeping what is healthy, healthy.

03What We’re Building

We are building the capability to safely preserve healthy cognition: protecting the brain’s structure and chemistry against age-related decline, building the reserve that delays it, and removing the modifiable drivers that erode thinking — so people keep their full cognitive capacity for as long as they live. Every lever is an evidence-backed, attributed mechanism.

04How It Works

Each preservation lever — with the evidence and the people behind it

Building cognitive reserve Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: a lifetime of learning and mental engagement builds cognitive reserve — resilience that delays decline. Epidemiological studies consistently link heightened complex mental activity with reduced dementia risk, the behavioral foundation of preservation.

Lifelong education & learning Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: education is the most consistent reserve proxy — higher educational attainment is inversely related to dementia onset, and continued learning extends the protection across life. One of the strongest single levers.

Protecting the vascular base Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: much cognitive aging is vascular; protecting healthy blood pressure and circulation preserves processing speed and memory — among the modifiable factors in the Lancet Commission‘s dementia-prevention evidence.

Protecting metabolic health Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: blood sugar and metabolic health shape brain aging; managing them protects cognition — a Lancet modifiable factor, linked to metabolic health and brain energy.

Protecting sleep & overnight clearance Demonstrated — clinical

Why it matters: healthy sleep runs the brain’s overnight clearance and consolidates memory; protecting it preserves cognition and links directly to neuroprotection.

Staying physically active Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: physical activity supports brain blood flow, BDNF, and brain energy — among the most reliable protectors of cognition with age, and a core component of the FINGER trial‘s successful multidomain prevention.

Protecting hearing & vision Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: untreated hearing and vision loss accelerate cognitive decline; protecting the senses protects the mind — two of the strongest Lancet modifiable factors.

Protecting mental health Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: depression is a Lancet modifiable dementia factor; protecting mental health preserves cognition — mind and brain health are inseparable.

Staying socially connected Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: social isolation raises decline and dementia risk; connection supports cognitive reserve — an accessible, powerful Lancet-factor protector.

Protecting against clean-air & exposure risk Demonstrated — clinical

The evidence: air pollution is a Lancet modifiable dementia factor; clean air protects the aging brain — environmental preservation, not just personal.

Tracking change early Clinical

The capability: catching decline early — through accessible cognitive and, increasingly, blood-based brain-health measures — lets preservation act when it works best. Prevention applied early, the whole-life approach of neuroprotection.

05Who Is Building It

Cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers.

The Lancet Commission

The Lancet standing Commission on Dementia, whose modifiable-risk evidence underlies most preservation levers — vascular, metabolic, hearing/vision, depression, social, air (mechanisms 3–5, 7–10).

Prevention-trial networks

The FINGER trial (1,200 people in Finland; nutrition, exercise, cognitive training, risk monitoring) and the World-Wide FINGERS network testing multidomain preservation globally (mechanisms 1, 6).

Cognitive-reserve researchers

Groups establishing education and engagement as reserve proxies that delay decline (mechanisms 1, 2).

Government & programs

the National Institute on Aging (NIA, NIH) and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS, NIH), which fund cognitive-aging and prevention research (all mechanisms).

Enabling science

cognitive-reserve research · modifiable-risk epidemiology · vascular & metabolic brain health · sleep, sensory, and air-quality science · early brain-health measurement.

06The Technologies

The technologies of preservation are largely the proven, accessible ones, each evidence-backed above: reserve-building through lifelong learning; vascular and metabolic care; sleep, sensory, mental-health, social, and clean-air protection (the Lancet modifiable factors); and early tracking — together, validated at scale by FINGER, keeping the healthy brain healthy across a lifetime.

07The Breakthroughs

Cognitive aging is not fixed Demonstrated — clinical

The Lancet Commission ties a large share of dementia to modifiable factors — meaning much decline can be preserved against.

Reserve delays decline Demonstrated — clinical

Education and lifelong engagement measurably build resilience that delays cognitive decline.

Structured preservation works Clinical

The FINGER trial (and World-Wide FINGERS) shows multidomain prevention delivers real cognitive benefit in at-risk older adults.

The senses protect the mind Demonstrated — clinical

Treating hearing and vision loss is among the clearest levers for preserving cognition with age.

Mind and brain are inseparable Demonstrated — clinical

Depression and social isolation are modifiable dementia factors — protecting mental health and connection preserves cognition.

08The Challenges

The honest challenges: preservation shifts the odds powerfully but does not guarantee any one person’s outcome — genetics and chance still play a role, and some decline may not be fully preventable. The strongest levers are the accessible ones, applied consistently over a lifetime. We do not promise a frozen, ageless mind. But the direction is real and evidence-backed: protect the brain’s foundations early and continuously, and far more cognition is preserved than lost.

09The Goal, Fully Built

The future, fully built

A person who keeps their mind sharp for life: reserve built, the vascular and metabolic base protected, sleep and the senses defended, mental health and connection maintained, clean air secured, and change tracked early — so the slow erosion of aging is prevented, safely, and a full, capable mind is carried all the way through life.

Honest boundary: each lever carries its true stage and the specific evidence behind it. Preservation shifts the odds but does not guarantee any one outcome; some decline may not be fully preventable. The Healthy capability is safe, with no new health problems. AI supports human clinicians; it never replaces them.
10The Evidence

The proof, for this capability

Cited as evidence the capability is real, not as partners or endorsers.

Cognitive reserveDemonstrated (clinical)

Epidemiological studies link heightened complex mental activity with reduced dementia risk; reserve delays decline.

EducationDemonstrated (clinical)

Higher educational attainment is inversely related to dementia onset — the most consistent reserve proxy.

Lancet modifiable factorsDemonstrated (epidemiological)

The Lancet Commission identifies vascular, metabolic, hearing, vision, depression, social, and air-quality factors as modifiable dementia risks — the evidence base for most preservation levers.

FINGER multidomain preventionClinical

The FINGER trial (1,200 people; nutrition, exercise, cognitive training, risk monitoring) showed cognitive benefit; tested globally via World-Wide FINGERS.

Sensory protectionDemonstrated (clinical)

Treating hearing and vision loss slows cognitive decline — two of the strongest Lancet factors.

Sleep & cognitionDemonstrated (clinical)

Healthy sleep runs overnight clearance and memory consolidation, preserving cognition.

Mental health & connectionDemonstrated (clinical)

Depression and social isolation are modifiable dementia factors; protecting both preserves cognition.

Early trackingClinical

Accessible cognitive and emerging blood-based brain-health measures let preservation act when it works best.

Honest framing

Real organizations, trials, and findings are cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers. The Healthy capability is the safe preservation of cognition itself, creating no new health problems. Preservation shifts the odds powerfully but does not guarantee any one outcome.

Help build this future

Every signature grows the movement to make lifelong cognitive health real — and free at the point of need.

Paid for by Michael Floyd for President.

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