In the context of an ageing European population there is increasing demand for policies and strategies aimed at
maintaining or stimulating the cognitive abilities of older adults. Mental fitness programmes seek to maintain and promote
the emotional and psychological wellbeing of older adults, enabling them to meet the demands of everyday life. Although
many European countries have implemented programmes and services within a broad framework of active ageing, there
are no standardised guidelines regarding how this should be done. In order to learn more about these programmes and
services and provide useful information for decision making by policy makers we conducted a comparative study of the
initiatives undertaken in eight different countries. Using qualitative content analysis we examined the stated objectives
– in terms of attitudes, knowledge and abilities – of 116 programmes and services implemented across these countries.
Overall, the results showed that ability objectives are much more common than are those focused on attitudes and
knowledge. A more specific network analysis also provided information about how the sub-categories of each of the
three kinds of objective are related to one another. The findings have practical implications for future planning of mental
fitness programmes.