More young U.S. adults report trouble with memory and focus
From 2013 to 2023, the prevalence of self-reported difficulties with memory, concentration and decision-making nearly doubled among young adults.

Self-reported cognitive struggles have nearly doubled in people ages 18 to 39 since 2013
Nearly twice as many young adults reported cognitive disability in 2023 as in 2013. The reasons for the increase aren’t known.
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More U.S. adults than ever report having serious trouble concentrating, remembering or making decisions.
In 2023, more than 7 percent of adults without depression self-reported this type of cognitive disability. That figure is up from just over 5 percent a decade earlier, researchers report September 24 in Neurology. The uptick started in 2016. The rise is primarily driven by younger adults ages 18 to 39, for whom the prevalence of cognitive disability has nearly doubled to almost 10 percent.
Those data come from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey. That yearly telephone survey, conducted by state health departments in collaboration with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, recorded more than 4.5 million responses about brain health during the study period
While the survey data reflect self-reports rather than medical diagnoses, the increase could signal a public health concern. Older people who self-report cognitive problems are more likely to have further declines later, though no one knows if the same is true for younger adults.
Percentage of U.S. adults reporting cognitive disability, by age group
In a survey, adults without depression in the United States reported a sharp rise in cognitive disability from 2013 to 2023, with the uptick starting in 2016. In young adults ages 18 to 39 the prevalence nearly doubled, rising to about 1 in 10 over that decade. By contrast, people ages 70 and older reported a slight decrease in cognitive disability in the same period.
The reasons for the increase aren’t clear. Broader awareness and reduced stigma may make younger adults more likely to admit to brain health issues, says study coauthor Ka-Ho Wong, a population health scientist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Brain fog from long COVID may have contributed slightly to the rise, he says. “But I certainly don’t think it is the sole cause at all.”
Economic stress, job market uncertainty and increasing reliance on digital tools may play a role. For instance, Wong says that while his parents can remember their childhood home phone numbers, younger adults “can barely remember our own cell phone numbers half of the time.”
The finding indicates that doctors and public health officials should pay closer attention to the brain health of young adults, Wong says. “If they report it, we need to address it.”
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