## Abstract ## Objectives To develop a questionnaire that will capture patients' attitudes about dementia screening in primary care. ## Methods Crossโsectional study of 315 patients aged 65 and older attending urban and rural primary care clinics in Indianapolis and North Carolina. The Perceptio
Patients' attitudes of dementia screening across the Atlantic
โ Scribed by Michael D. Justiss; Malaz Boustani; Chris Fox; Cornelius Katona; Anthony J. Perkins; Patrick J. Healey; Greg Sachs; Siu Hui; Christopher M. Callahan; Hugh C. Hendrie; Emma Scott
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 69 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
- DOI
- 10.1002/gps.2173
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Background
Dementia is a common and growing global public health problem. It leads to a high burden of suffering for society with an annual cost of $100 billion in the US and $10 billion in the UK. New strategies for both treatment and prevention of dementia are currently being developed. Implementation of these strategies will depend on the presence of a viable community or primary care based dementia screening and diagnosis program and patient acceptance of such a program.
Objective
To compare the acceptance, perceived harms and perceived benefits of dementia screening among older adults receiving their care in two different primary health care systems in two countries.
Design
A Crossโsectional study.
Setting
Primary care clinics in Indianapolis, USA and Kent, UK.
Participants
A convenience sample of 245 older adults (Indianapolis, nโ=โ125; Kent, nโ=โ120).
Outcomes
Acceptance of dementia screening and its perceived harms and benefits as determined by a 52โitem questionnaire (PRISMโPC questionnaire).
Results
Four of the five domains were significantly different across the two samples. The UK sample had significantly higher dementia screening acceptance scores (pโ<โ0.05); higher perceived stigma scores (pโ<โ0.05); higher perceived loss of independence scores (pโ<โ0.01); and higher perceived suffering scores (pโ<โ0.01) than the US sample. Both groups perceived dementia screening as beneficial (pโ=โ0.218). After controlling for prior experience with dementia, acceptance and stigma were marginalized.
Conclusions
Older adults attending primary care clinics across the Atlantic value dementia screening but have significant concerns about dementia screening although these concerns differed between the two countries. Low acceptance rates and high rates of perceived harms might be a significant barrier for the introduction of treatment or preventive methods for dementia in the future. Copyright ยฉ 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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