The presence of' depression was evaluated in a cross-section of 50 outpatients with dementia using the self-rated Geriatric Depression Scale and the clinician-rated Cornell Depression Scale. Impaired insight, as manifested by unawareness of dementia, correlated with dementia severity and discriminat
Rates of dementia in three ethnoracial groups
✍ Scribed by Barry J. Gurland; David E. Wilder; Rafael Lantigua; Yaakov Stern; Jiming Chen; Eloise H. P. Killeffer; Richard Mayeux
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 171 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Background. Rates of dementia may vary among ethnoracial groups. Any real and substantial such dierence would merit serious attention by health planners, clinicians and those seeking to advance our understanding of the etiology of this group of disorders.
Methods. Randomly selected elderly persons from each of three ethnoracial groups (Latinos, African-Americans, non-Latino Whites) residing in a geographic area of northern Manhattan in New York City were screened for dementia and assessed with respect to functioning in daily tasks and other qualities of life. Systematic samples of each group were clinically evaluated for presence and subtype of dementia. Subjects were reassessed at an average of 18 months following the baseline interview.
Results. Age-speci®c prevalence of dementia was found to be higher in Latinos and African-Americans than in non-Latino Whites; incidence rates were consistent with this ®nding. Ethnoracial groups did not vary in the proportion of dementias diagnosed as Alzheimer's disease. Prevalence dierences between ethnoracial groups remained consistent as diagnostic criteria were varied in breadth and when the possible mislabelling of depression was taken into account. However, level of education was strongly associated with rates of dementia and, when age and education were simultaneously controlled, the ethnoracial dierences in rates were not consistently found.
Conclusions. Planning for the wide range of services necessary for care of those suering from dementia should take into account ethnoracial dierences in rates. The higher rates found in Latino and African-American groups, relative to non-Latino Whites, are associated with clear and substantial functional dependencies and hence have important implications for qualities of life and service needs.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## HUK-Verband, Cologne IN GREAT BRITAIN only about half as many people are killed annually in road accidents as in Germany. Since the total vehicle-mileage run in the two countries is of the same order of magnitude. we gaze in wonder at England and praise her traffic discipline. In the U.S.A. t
## Abstract The prevalence of dementia in Parkinson's disease (PD) is close to 30%, and its incidence is 4 to 6 times higher than in age‐matched general population. PD with dementia (PDD) is mainly characterized by a predominant and progressive frontal‐subcortical impairment. The Mattis Dementia Ra
## Abstract ## Objective This study aimed to investigate the impact of comorbidity on cognitive and functional decline in patients with Alzheimer dementia (AD). ## Methods One hundred and two AD outpatients examined at the Psychiatry Department of the CF2 Polyclinic in Bucharest, Romania and re‐
The paper waa read at the annual convention of the American Psychological Aeaociation in Iphilad e l p b , 1963.