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Abstract Background The ageing of incarcerated populations is accelerating across high-income countries, yet dementia remains absent from routine correctional mental health statistics. We investigated whether correctional data systems in Japan, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia are structurally capable of detecting dementia in their prison populations. Methods We conducted a cross-national descriptive analysis of publicly available, aggregate-level correctional data. Japanese data comprised all newly admitted sentenced prisoners from 2006 to 2024 (approximately 390,000 individuals) from the Ministry of Justice Correctional Statistics Annual, including mental disorder classifications and CAPAS-derived work aptitude scores (used as a proxy for cognitive functioning; not clinical IQ measurements). US data were drawn from the Bureau of Justice Statistics Survey of Prison Inmates (2016). UK data were obtained from the Ministry of Justice Offender Management Statistics Quarterly (2015–2025). Australian data were sourced from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare National Prisoner Health Data Collection (2022, n = 371). All analyses were descriptive; no inferential statistics were conducted. Findings Three distinct mechanisms rendered dementia statistically invisible across all four countries. First, in the United States and Australia, reliance on self-report instruments produced a paradox in which self-reported mental disorder prevalence declined with age: among US state prisoners, reported prevalence fell from 44.9% in the 35–44 age group to 31.9% among those aged 65 and older — the opposite of community epidemiological patterns. Second, in Japan — the only country with systematic cognitive assessment at prison admission — 35.0% of female theft offenders had work aptitude scores below 70, yet the classification system contains no dementia category; 43–52% of all detected mental disorders were absorbed into a residual “other” category even after a 2023 classification revision that added four new diagnostic categories but not dementia. Third, the United Kingdom lacks routine mental health prevalence data collection in prisons altogether. None of the four countries includes dementia as a standard correctional classification category. Interpretation Correctional mental health statistics across four high-income countries are structurally incapable of detecting dementia — not through clinical ignorance but by design: systems built for younger populations that have not been updated as prison demographics have changed. Japan’s ageing female theft offender profile (39.4% aged 60 or older, 35.0% with low cognitive scores) represents a potential sentinel population for undetected cognitive impairment. Targeted interventions — cognitive screening at admission in the United States and Australia, introduction of a dementia classification category in Japan, and routine mental health data publication in the United Kingdom — are feasible with existing infrastructure. As prison populations continue to age, the statistical invisibility of dementia constitutes an escalating failure of health surveillance with direct consequences for clinical care, sentencing, and human rights.