Is Mild Dementia Related to Unsafe Street-Crossing Decisions?

Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord

*IFSTTAR, LEPSIS §Clinique Médicale de la Porte Verte ∥Centre Hospitalier de Versailles, site Richaud, Versailles †Hôpital Broca, GH Paris Centre, AP-HP ‡EA 44 68, Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France.

Published: September 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Participants with mild dementia were found to make riskier crossing decisions compared to healthy controls, especially in more complex traffic situations.
  • * Cognitive tests indicated that slower processing speed and visual attention deficits contributed to these risky decisions, suggesting a need for clinicians to assess these abilities to ensure safe mobility in elderly patients.

Article Abstract

The overrepresentation of very old people (75 or older) in pedestrian crash statistics raises the issue of the effects of normal and pathologic ageing on gap-selection difficulties during street crossing. The present study focused on Alzheimer disease, a condition commonly associated with cognitive declines detrimental to daily life activities such as crossing the street. Twenty-five participants with mild dementia and 33 controls carried out a street-crossing task in a simulated environment. They also took a battery of cognitive tests. The mild-dementia group was more likely than the control group to make decisions that led to collisions with approaching cars, especially when the traffic was coming from 2 directions and they were in the far lane. Regression analyses demonstrated that the increased likelihood of collisions in the dementia group was associated with impairments in processing-speed and visual-attention abilities assessed on the Useful Field of View test. This test has already proven useful for predicting driving outcomes, falls, and street-crossing difficulties in healthy old adults, and among drivers with Alzheimer disease. Clinicians are encouraged to use it to help estimate whether a patient can drive, walk, and cross a street safely.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/WAD.0000000000000074DOI Listing

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