Arab Times

More Americans with Alzheimer’s dying at home: report

Brazilian docs use fish skin to treat burn victims

-

NEW YORK, May 27, (Agencies): One in 4 Alzheimer’s deaths in the United States are now occurring at home — a startling increase that marks a shift away from hospitals and nursing homes, according to a report.

Alzheimer’s deaths in hospitals and nursing homes or other long-term care facilities shrank from more than 80 percent to 60 percent over 15 years. Meanwhile, those dying at home rose from 14 percent to 25 percent, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found.

Alzheimer’s disease is a progressiv­e brain disorder that impairs memory, judgment and other mental abilities. It’s most common in the elderly. In the final stages of the disease, people have trouble eating and carrying on a conversati­on, are vulnerable to pneumonia and infections, and often need around-the-clock care. The Alzheimer’s death rate has risen nearly 80 percent since 1999 and the disease is the nation’s sixth leading cause of death.

Deaths have been climbing for some time. A big reason is declines in other causes of death — particular­ly heart disease and cancer — are enabling more people to live long enough to die from Alzheimer’s, experts say.

In the new report, the CDC analyzed death certificat­es from 1999 to 2014 and found a surprise — a shift in where people with Alzheimer’s are dying.

Experts said it’s not clear why more people with Alzheimer’s are dying at home than in hospitals or nursing homes. One possible explanatio­n is patient preference. For people losing their memories, it can be a comfort to remain in familiar surroundin­gs, said A Yemeni child suspected of being infected with cholera receives treatment at a hospital in Sanaa. Cholera has killed 315 people in Yemen in under a month, the World Health Organizati­on has said, as another aid organisati­on

warned the outbreak could become a ‘full-blown epidemic’. (AFP)

Jeff Huber, president of Home Instead Senior Care, an Omaha-based company that provides home care to tens of thousands of clients with Alzheimer’s and dementia.

But it can be difficult for families. Even if they have the insurance or money to get home-care workers to help, caring for an Alzheimer’s patient can take an exhausting toll, experts said.

As baby boomers age, “the numbers dying from Alzheimer’s are just going to get worse,” said Keith Fargo, director of scientific programs for the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n.

The CDC also released Alzheimer’s death rates for counties.

The counties with the highest rates over 10 years were tiny Eddy County in east central North Dakota, and Hamlin County in eastern South Dakota. Several counties in the South were near the top of the list.

It’s not clear why. Doctors in some places might be better at diagnosing Alzheimer’s, or coroners and medical examiners might more commonly put Alzheimer’s on death certificat­es instead of other causes, said Christophe­r Taylor, a CDC epidemiolo­gist who was the report’s lead author.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait