Older patients with dementia are diagnosed with flu less frequently, have shorter hospital stays, and have a fifty percent higher rate of death than those...
Older patients with dementia are diagnosed with flu less frequently, have shorter hospital stays, and have a fifty percent higher rate of death than those without the disorder, a new study has revealed.
"The increased mortality of older patients with dementia hospitalized for flu may be indicative of inadequacies in health care quality and accessibility. It could be beneficial to refine guidelines for the immunization, testing, and treatment of flu in older patients with dementia when planning for the possibility of a flu pandemic," said first and senior author Elena Naumova, PhD, professor of public health and community medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine.Dementia, defined by the authors as cognitive impairment to the extent that normal activity is impaired, causes unique obstacles to the early diagnosis and treatment of flu.
Patients may have difficulty communicating symptoms and medical complications due to poor oral hygiene or impaired swallowing.
Additionally, the researchers believe that limited access to health care services and inadequate testing practices may contribute to the higher rates of mortality and lower rates of diagnosis of flu seen in older patients with dementia.
A geographic analysis of the data showed that pneumonia and influenza (P andI) rates were highest among older adults in poor and rural areas, where there is a lower concentration of health care facilities.
"Limited access to specialized health care services can delay diagnosis and treatment of the flu, causing it to progress to pneumonia, the fifth leading cause of death among the elderly. This study has helped us identify this vulnerable population, and now further study is needed to confirm the findings and assess the testing and vaccination policies for older patients with dementia," said Naumova.
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Of the 36 million hospitalization records for adults aged 65 and older, more than six million records documented a P andI diagnosis.
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The demographic and geographic patterns of P andI hospitalizations and their links with hospital accessibility were explored.
Pneumonia and influenza admissions, length of stay in a hospital, and mortality rates among elderly with dementia were compared to national estimates.
The study was published online in advance of print in Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
Source-ANI
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