Survival and early recourse to care for dementia: A population based study.

Alzheimers Dement

INSERM, ISPED, Centre INSERM U897-Epidemiologie-Biostatistique, Bordeaux, France; Univ. Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France; INSERM, Clinical Investigation Center - Clinical Epidemiology 7, Bordeaux, France.

Published: April 2015

Background: A large proportion of dementia cases are still undiagnosed. Although early dementia care has been hypothesized to benefit both patients and families, evidence-based benefits are lacking. Thus, investigating the benefits for newly demented persons according to their recourse to care in the "real life" appears critical.

Methods: We examined the relation between initial care recourse care and demented individuals' survival in a large cohort of incident dementia cases screened in a prospective population-based cohort, the Three-City Study. We assessed recourse to care for cognitive complaint at the early beginning of dementia when incident cases were screened. We classified patients in three categories: no care recourse, general practitioner consultation or specialist consultation. We used proportional hazard regression models to test the association between recourse to care and mortality, adjusting on socio-demographical and clinical characteristics.

Results: Two hundred and fifty-three incident dementia participants were screened at the 2 year or 4 year follow-up. One third of the incident demented individuals had not consulted a physician for cognitive problems. Eighty-six (34.0%) individuals had reported a cognitive problem only to their general practitioner (GP) and 80 (31.6%) had consulted a specialist. Mean duration of follow-up after incident dementia was 5.1 years, during which 146 participants died. After adjustment on potential confounders, participants who had consulted a specialist early in the disease course presented a poorer survival than those who did not consult any physician (hazard ratio = 1.64, 95% confidence interval 1.03-2.62). There was a trend but no significant differential survival profile between participants who complained to their GP and those without any care recourse.

Conclusion: Neither recourse to a specialist nor recourse to GP improve survival of new dementia cases. Those who had consulted a specialist early in the disease course even reported a worse life expectancy than those who did not.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jalz.2014.04.512DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

recourse care
20
dementia cases
12
incident dementia
12
consulted specialist
12
care
9
recourse
8
dementia
8
early dementia
8
care recourse
8
cases screened
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!