We report on the prevalence of dementia in Canadians age 85 years and older. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the prevalence of dementia continued to increase in the very old, and to define the types of dementia and their relative proportions in this age group. We collected data as part of the Canadian Study of Health and Aging (1990 to 1992), which consisted of a sample of 1,835 subjects from a population of 283,510 Canadians who were 85 years of age and older residing in the community or in institutions. The prevalence of dementia in the 85 years and older group was 28.5%, more than twice that of the 75- to 84-years cohort. The prevalence of dementia of 23% in the 85- to 89-years sample (n = 1,332) increased to 40% in the 90 to 94 years group (n = 371) and, in the 95 years and older sample (n = 104), reached 58%. Overall, Alzheimer's disease (AD; probable or possible) accounted for 75% of all dementias; a vascular etiology alone accounted for 13% of dementias. The proportion of clinically diagnosed AD cases to vascular dementia cases increased significantly after age 65 and was higher in the 85+ group than in a younger cohort (65 to 84 years).
Vascular risk factors occurred more commonly in patients with vascular cognitive impairment compared with other patients, including those with other forms of dementia. When present, such risk factors were often treated pharmacologically, except in patients with severe dementia and those in long-term care institutions. Undertreatment does not, in general, result in worsened risk factor control.
This study supports the utility of SRH assessments in predicting survival of individuals with mild to moderate cognitive impairment. The findings highlight the potential role of complex cognitive processes underlying the SRH-mortality relationship.
This report describes a population of individuals with dementia living alone in the community. Data were collected as part of the Canadian Study of Health and Aging (CSHA). We found that one third of the subjects in the CSHA sample with a dementia residing in the community lived alone. Whether their identified informal caregiver had thought about institutionalization was an important factor in actual short-term (2-year) institutionalization and appeared to be influenced by living arrangements. Caregivers of those living alone provided less hands-on assistance, experienced less burden, and were less likely to be depressed than those living with the demented person, but were more likely to have considered institutionalization. Presumably, this was driven by concerns about safety and support. How to support the growing numbers of individuals with dementia living alone in the community will be a significant challenge.
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