## Abstract ## Background Quality of life (QoL) is becoming an increasingly used outcome measure in both clinical practice and research but little is known about QoL in dementia and how it may change over time. ## Objective To study longitudinal change in quality of life over a period of one yea
The prognosis of demented patients — one-year follow-up study of a population sample
✍ Scribed by Kati Juva; Raimo Sulkava; Timo Erkinjuntti; Matti Mäkelä; Jaakko Valvanne; Reijo Tilvis
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 375 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Functional decline and mortality after I-year follow-up of 93 demented elderly subjects from a random population sample (N = 795) were studied in Helsinki, Finland. Seventeen ( l8YO) of the demented patients died as compared to only 5% of the non-demented subjects. The age-adjusted risk ratio for 1-year mortality of demented patients was 3.2 (95Y0 confidence interval 1.8-5.6). Forty-four per cent (26/59) of the surviving patients who were not bedridden and incontinent at the very beginning of the study suffered further impairment in the following functions: institutionalization (6/21), losing the ability to walk (5/57) or beginning of incontinence (17/30). Sixteen (21%) surviving subjects were already bedbound, incontinent and institutionalized at the beginning of the study. Age, sex or the degree of dementia did not correlate to mortality or functional decline. The number of patients who were institutionalized during the follow-up was small. The appearance of incontinence and other recorded risk factors (age, degree of dementia or motility) did not seem to predispose to institutionalization. Subjective factors, such as caretaker's burden, probably have a great influence on the ending of home care.
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