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Revealing a hidden problem. An evaluation of a community dementia case-finding program from the Indian 10/66 dementia research network

✍ Scribed by K. S. Shaji; N. R. Arun Kishore; K. Praveen Lal; Martin Prince


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
49 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Dementia in India is largely a hidden problem with no community awareness and little help seeking from affected families, despite high levels of strain. Cases must therefore be identified before practical help can be offered.

Method

After two and a half hours of formal training, local community health workers in rural Kerala were asked to identify possible cases of dementia from the community they served. Diagnoses were then verified by a senior local psychiatrist with clinical and research interests in old age psychiatry.

Results

The community health workers identified 51 out of 1979 over 60 year old residents (a prevalence of 2.6%) as suspected cases of dementia. Following the psychiatrist's assessment, 33 met DSM‐IV criteria for dementia. The majority of confirmed cases were of the Alzheimer's Disease sub‐type. Most ‘non‐cases’ were found to be suffering from other major psychiatric disorders, with substantial unmet need. The positive predictive value of the community health workers informal screening was 64.7%.

Conclusions

This simple cost‐effective case‐finding method can be of practical use in the development of community based dementia care services in India and other developing countries with similar health care systems. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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## Background: Dementia is a rapidly growing problem in all parts of the developing world. such societies are characterised by low levels of awareness regarding dementia as a chronic degenerative brain syndrome, and by an absence of supportive health and welfare services. there is reliance upon fam