Women with dementia appear to receive less primary healthcare, but take more psychotropic medication that may negatively impact their physical health.
Highlights
- UK Dementia Strategies prioritizes fair access to mental and physical healthcare.
- Inequalities by deprivation or gender in healthcare services was observed in people with dementia.
- Women receive more psychotropic medication and fewer surgery consultations.
- Improving access to healthcare and reducing psychotropic drug use could help them to live well with dementia for longer.
We found that women were more likely to be on psychotropic drugs - sedatives or anti-psychotics -which can be harmful in the long term and may not be appropriate. Women tended to stay on such drugs for longer, perhaps because they have fewer check-ups to see if the drugs were still needed.
"Women with dementia who live on their own may need additional support accessing healthcare services. We should ensure GPs have the resources to proactively engage with these patients and review their condition regularly to make sure their treatment plan, including any drugs, are appropriate. Improving access to healthcare and reducing psychotropic drug use in people with dementia, especially women, could help them to live well with dementia for longer."
The researchers analysed the records of 68,000 dementia patients and 259,000 people without dementia to compare their access to healthcare services, using The Health Improvement Network (THIN) database. Overall, people with dementia received less medical care than those without even though they are more vulnerable to physical and mental illnesses.
"Dementia can cause a wide range of physical complications, including difficulties swallowing and mobility problems," says Dr Cooper. "People with dementia are particularly susceptible to malnutrition, as they may have difficulties eating, preparing food or remembering to eat.”
Improvements may be linked to the government's National Dementia Strategy which launched in 2009. Around the time this was launched, GP surgeries were offered additional financial incentives through the NHS Quality and Outcomes Framework to review dementia patients annually. However, the latest study suggests that there is still more work to be done to ensure that people with dementia, particularly women, are able to access the services they need.
- Claudia Cooper et al. Inequalities in receipt of mental and physical healthcare in people with dementia in the UK, Age and Ageing (2016) http://ageing.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2016/12/02/ageing.afw208
Source-Medindia