Staff had only limited understanding of how Alzheimer's disease impacted the adults with Down syndrome, their responses to changes were ad hoc, and they used strategies on a trial and error basis. They were committed to providing care, but at the risk of rejecting input and support. The need for collaboration across disability, and aged and disability care was evident to facilitate aging-in-place and planned care transitions.
Intellectual disability (ID) or mental retardation or learning disability is a lifelong condition included in the group of mental disorders in all the international classification systems. It is a syndrome grouping (meta-syndrome) including a heterogeneous range of clinical conditions characterized by a deficit in cognitive functioning prior to the acquisition of skills through learning (1). Over 30% of people with ID have a comorbid psychiatric disorder, which often has its onset in childhood and persists through adolescence and adulthood (2,3).In spite of this evidence, ID and related conditions are still considered a marginal area of psychiatry. In many countries there is little or no training provision on ID during undergraduate medical training or psychiatric specialization. The World Health Organization (WHO) has recently highlighted the unmet care needs of persons with ID (4). Psychiatrists are the first health professionals in contact with this population group and there is a global gap in training and guidelines on mental health issues related to ID.Within the ID field, the assessment, differential diagnosis and treatment of problem behaviours (PBs) deserve special attention. The rate of PBs in people with ID is high (5) and their presentation is determined by many complex factors. The pathogenic contribution of organic conditions, psychiatric disorders, environmental influences, or a combination of these has to be carefully established for every single case.The prevalence of PBs in people with ID seems to be sufficiently high (5,6) to constitute a major concern in this population. Depending on the definition and methodology, rates have been reported to vary from 5.7 to 17% (7-10). Using the Diagnostic Criteria for Psychiatric Disorders for Use with Adults with Learning Disabilities (DC-LD) (11), Cooper et al (12,13) aggression and self-injurious behaviour to be 9.8% and 4.9%, respectively, among adults (16 years and over) with ID in a community setting.It has been reported that 20-45% of people with ID are receiving psychotropic medication and 14-30% are receiving psychotropic medication to manage PBs such as aggression or self-injurious behaviours (14,15) in the absence of a diagnosed psychiatric disorder. Examples of psychotropic medications used for adults with ID are antipsychotics, antidepressants, anti-anxiety drugs (benzodiazepines, buspirone, beta-blockers), mood stabilizers (lithium, anticonvulsants), psychostimulants, and opioid antagonists. Spreat et al (16) reported that as many as two thirds of psychotropic medications prescribed to people with ID are antipsychotics.Studies suggest that PBs are not only prevalent but also persistent in people with . Totsika et al (20) found that serious physical attacks, self-injury and stereotypy were the most likely types of PBs to persist over time. It is therefore suggested that it may be necessary to start interventions as early as possible to prevent the behaviours from becoming more serious and to reduce the number of emergent behaviours. It has...
Background: As life expectancy of people with intellectual disabilities (ID) extends into older
The life expectancy of adults with Down syndrome has increased dramatically over the last 30 years, leading to increasing numbers of adults with Down syndrome now living into middle and old age. Early‐onset dementia of the Alzheimer type is highly prevalent in adults with Down syndrome in the sixth decade, and this has overshadowed other important conditions related to aging among adults with Down syndrome. The authors' aim was to update and summarize current knowledge on these conditions, and examine causes of morbidity and mortality in older people with Down syndrome by conducting a systematic review of the published literature for the period: 1993–2008. They reviewed English‐language literature drawn from searches in the electronic databases Medline, CINAHL, and PsycINFO, as well as supplementary historical papers. The authors conclude that functional decline in older adults with Down syndrome cannot be assumed to be due only to dementia of the Alzheimer type (which is not inevitable in all adults with Down syndrome). Functional decline may be the result from a range of disorders, especially sensory and musculoskeletal impairments. Given the high rates of early‐onset age‐related disorders among adults with Down syndrome, programmatic screening, monitoring, and preventive interventions are required to limit secondary disabilities and premature mortality. With respect to assessment and treatment, in the absence of specialist disability physicians, geriatricians have a role to play.
This research advances understandings of the support needs of people with Down syndrome and Alzheimer's disease and their families. It exposes gaps in the service system.
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