According to a source titled 'The Effect of Personality Traits on Risk of Incident Pre-Dementia Syndromes', it first and foremost addresses how personality traits have been shown to be associated with the risk of dementia yet less is known about the link between personality traits and pre-dementia syndromes. This study suggests that after a median follow-up of 3 years, the findings provide evidence of a distinct relationship between personality traits and the development of specific pre-dementia symptoms.
According to another source, "Does Personality Affect Risk for Dementia? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis", the results concluded the following:
"Twelve longitudinal and three case–control studies were included. Five of nine studies found that higher neuroticism was associated with greater dementia risk...Neuroticism increased risk for dementia, and conscientiousness reduced risk. The protective effect of openness was tentative. Extraversion and agreeableness were not associated with dementia. Personality should be incorporated in conceptual models of dementia risk. Clinicians and public health professionals should consider personality when planning dementia risk reduction strategies." (Low).
Lastly, to consider one more source to prove this claim as a high potential of being true, 'Is personality associated with dementia risk? A met-analytic investigation' straightforwardly claims that 'robust' associations were found of neuroticism and conscientiousness with dementia risk. The concluding statement claims "Overall, the present work confirms consistent associations of neuroticism and conscientiousness with risk of dementia. The associations of the remaining traits were also significant but less robust. We found no evidence of publication bias, suggesting no systematic over- or under-estimation of the estimated effects...Studies are now needed to determine whether and how neuroticism and conscientiousness could be incorporated into interventions for dementia prevention." (Aschwanden).
After considering three reliable sources, the claim "Neurotic Personality Increases Chance of Dementia by 68%" seems to have been proven TRUE. Nevertheless, while I did not find a specific study that confirms the percentage increase of 68%, every source claims there is an association between dementia and neuroticism. Therefore, the 68% portion of this claim may be labeled as 'No Available Information'. However, the first part of the claim, 'Neutoric Personality Increases Chance of Dementia' seems to be a true statement based on these sources.
Works Cited/Sources
Aschwanden, D., Strickhouser, J. E., Luchetti, M., Stephan, Y., Sutin, A. R., & Terracciano, A. (2021). Is personality associated with dementia risk? A meta-analytic investigation. Ageing Research Reviews, 67, 101269. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2021.101269
Ayers, E., Gulley, E., & Verghese, J. (2020). The effect of personality traits on risk of incident pre‐dementia syndromes. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 68(7), 1554–1559. https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.16424
Low, L.-F., Harrison, F., & Lackersteen, S. M. (2013). Does personality affect risk for dementia? A systematic review and meta-analysis. The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 21(8), 713–728. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jagp.2012.08.004