Missing Woman with Dementia in Chicago

Chicago - A woman with dementia has been missing since last week from her Calumet City home is believed to be traveling on CTA buses in the South and West sides of Chicago.

An adult daughter was caring for Earcell Hines, 71, of the 1600 block of Downs Drive in Calumet City, when she left her home April 24 by possibly receiving a ride to Chicago, according to a release from Calumet City police. There is no indication of foul play.

She suffers from early onset dementia, the release said.

Hines is using her CTA pass to travel throughout the South and West sides of Chicago on buses, possibly visiting numerous churches, as she is deeply religious, the release said.

She contacted a relative Friday, April 27 in the 1700 block of North Parkside saying she was on her way over, but never arrived, the release said. Hines made the phone call from a McDonalds restaurant at Kedzie Avenue and Roosevelt Road.

Hines is described as an African American woman, 5-feet-3, 160 pounds, with dark hair, the release said.

She has a bible and wire rimmed prescription glasses, which she would never travel without the release said. She possibly has her state drivers license that has an address in the 8500 block of South Morgan Street in Chicago.

Anyone with any information regarding this case is encouraged to contact Calumet City police at (708) 868-2500.

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Missing Woman with Dementia in Chicago

Mayo Clinic: Dementia Risk Reduced by Exercise and Computers

Exercise and computer use can help stave off dementia, according to research (Reuters)

Combining exercise and computer use could help to reduce the risks of dementia, a study claims.

Researchers in Minnesota found an association between engaging in moderate exercise and mentally stimulating activities in reducing the risks of dementia, according to a study published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

The study had more than 920 people between the ages of 70 and 93 in Olmsted County, Minnesota, complete questionnaires detailing the amount of time they exercise and spend on computers over the previous year.

Of those who both exercised and used a computer, 18.3 percent showed signs of mild cognitive impairment (dementia), compared to 37.6 percent who did neither. Of those who did both, 36 percent were declared cognitively normal, while 20.1 percent were normal in the group that did neither.

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Experts warn that the world's ageing population will lead to major increases in the number of people who sufferer from dementia and other degenerative mental conditions, such as Alzheimer's.

A spokesman for the Alzheimer's Society said: "There is already considerable evidence to show that donning the walking shoes, or hitting the tennis courts can have real benefits for your head as well as your heart.

"Although we need to know more before we can say for sure whether using computers has real additional benefits and why this could be, we would encourage any older people who enjoy using them to keep it up.

"The best way to reduce your risk of dementia is to exercise regularly, eat a healthy diet, don't smoke and get your blood pressure and cholesterol checked by your GP."

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Mayo Clinic: Dementia Risk Reduced by Exercise and Computers

Dementia denial: Two out of three older people are worried¿ but most don¿t want to know more

'We need to stop worrying and start understanding dementia,' says charity spokesman Carers are 'amazing source of inspiration' says actress Carey Mulligan, whose grandmother has Alzheimer's

By Jenny Hope

PUBLISHED: 02:10 EST, 21 May 2012 | UPDATED: 03:50 EST, 21 May 2012

Two out of three older people are worried about dementia - but most dont want to know any more about it, says a new survey.

It reveals that 66 per cent of people aged 55 and over have worries about brain diseases such as Alzheimers - and it is the age group with the biggest fears.

But almost as many young people aged 18-24 - 61 per cent - are worried.

Carey Mulligan is now an Ambassador for the Alzheimer's Society - her grandmother was diagnosed with the condition eight years ago

More women than men are anxious about dementia, 70 per cent compared with 56 per cent of men.

However, fewer than one in six older people want to learn more about the disease, says a joint poll commissioned by Alzheimers Society and Saga Homecare published today.

Oscar-nominated actress, Carey Mulligan, has become an 'ambassador' for the Alzheimer's Society to promote better awareness and less fear of the condition.

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Dementia denial: Two out of three older people are worried¿ but most don¿t want to know more

Valley hospice program leader lauded for dementia work

by Connie Cone Sexton - May. 2, 2012 12:56 PM The Republic | azcentral.com

When Maribeth Gallagher came to work for Hospice of the Valley in 2005, she assisted a team that focused on dementia.

Gallagher, a psychiatric nurse practitioner with a doctorate in nursing practice from Arizona State University, now leads the team as its director. It's an area that has brought her great joy and her experience on the job has given her enough fortitude to weather "days that are really difficult." But Gallagher believes her work is "a calling.

"It just felt right, within me."

On March 29, she was recognized by the London-basedInternational Journal of Palliative Nursing for her leadership providing exceptional end-of-life care for dementia patients. Gallagher flew to London to accept her first-place award in the "non-cancer" category in an awards contest sponsored by the journal.

In other honors, Gallagher will be presented with the Program Manager of the Year award Thursday by the Visiting Nurse Associations of America at its annual meeting in Phoenix.

The not-for-profit Hospice of the Valley cares for 4,000 patients a day in Maricopa and northern Pinal counties. About 12 percent of those patients have a primary diagnosis of dementia; more than half have dementia along with other diseases or conditions.

Gallagher has heard from some people who ask her why she likes focusing on patients with dementia. "They say, 'What can you possibly do for people in last stages of dementia?' "

But she points out that dementia is a disease of verbal language; the patient still has a heart and soul to be nurtured and recognition for who they are.

The HOV dementia team educates agency staff, community health-care providers and the public about non-invasive, non-pharmacological ways to maximize quality of life for dementia patients.

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Valley hospice program leader lauded for dementia work

Woman with dementia missing from Calumet City

Sun-Times Media Wire May 3, 2012 6:09AM

storyidforme: 29884076 tmspicid: 10828886 fileheaderid: 4958257

Updated: May 3, 2012 6:23AM

A woman with dementia has been missing since last week from her Calumet City home and is believed to be traveling on CTA buses in the South and West sides of Chicago.

An adult daughter was caring for Earcell Hines, 71, of the 1600 block of Downs Drive in Calumet City, when she left her home April 24 by possibly receiving a ride to Chicago, according to a release from Calumet City police.

There is no indication of foul play.

She suffers from early onset dementia, the release said.

Hines is using her CTA pass to travel throughout the South and West sides of Chicago on buses, possibly visiting numerous churches, as she is deeply religious, the release said.

She contacted a relative April 27 in the 1700 block of North Parkside Avenue saying she was on her way over, but never arrived, the release said.

Hines made the phone call from a McDonalds restaurant at Kedzie Avenue and Roosevelt Road.

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Woman with dementia missing from Calumet City

Dementia alarm bells in Boroondara

FORMER librarian Heather Robertson-Clarke can no longer read or write and is slowly losing her speech.

The Hawthorn East resident knows first-hand the effects of dementia after being diagnosed with the cruel and debilitating disease three years ago.

She is just one of thousands across Boroondara suffering from the affliction.

And the number of Boroondara residents with dementia is expected to skyrocket 170 per cent by 2050, a new study has revealed.

The figures, commissioned by Alzheimers Australia Vic, projected Boroondara residents living with dementia will balloon from 2582 today to more than 6900 in less than 40 years, placing a heavy toll on the districts medical and care services.

Alzheimers Australia Vic chief executive Maree McCabe said the prevalence of dementia would cost the nation $83 billion a year by 2050, which will exceed any other medical condition.

(The figures) really are frightening - its really important we are proactive, Ms McCabe said.

Almost 72,000 Victorians have dementia, which is expected to boom to 246,000 by 2050, according to the study by Deloitte Access Economics.

Prof David Ames, director of Parkvilles National Ageing Research Institute, said statistics revealed there would be as many Victorians with dementia in 2050 as there are Australians presently with the condition.

Ms McCabe said early detection was key.

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Dementia alarm bells in Boroondara

More dementia treatment available in Ashburton

Hon Jo Goodhew

Associate Minister of Health

26 April 2012 Media Statement More dementia treatment available in Ashburton

More local Mid Canterbury people suffering from dementia will be cared for in their local community following an extension and refurbishment to an aged care hospital unit officially opened today by Associate Health Minister Jo Goodhew.

This community investment adds another 10 bed dementia unit to the existing 12 psychogeriatric and 15 long stay hospital beds already in the Tuarangi resthome and hospital, says Mrs Goodhew.

We are living longer and sadly that also means that the number of older New Zealanders with dementia is increasing.

A loved one living with dementia is a challenge faced by many families, but there is much that we can do. These additional dedicated beds mean that local people with dementia can, if they choose, remain closer to home should they need residential care.

Providing care for individuals with dementia is a growing issue for our country. The 2010 aged residential care services review identified the most pressing need as expanding dementia units, beds and services.

The Government responded last year with an additional $44 million over four years to look after people living with dementia. This includes $40 million for residential dementia services and $4 million for respite care for full-time carers of individuals with dementia.

The Government is committed to ensuring all older people in residential care, including those with dementia, receive quality services and care.

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More dementia treatment available in Ashburton

Dementia study by Royal Aust College

The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists' Faculty of Psychiatry of Old Age welcomes the Australian government's announcement of initiatives for people with dementia and services to support aged care, but says more is need for the mental health needs of people in old age.

'Investment in dementia care and diagnosis and improved aged care services are essential and will go some way to improving the lives of older people with mental illness, and those of their families and carers. Improved access to services that support the person in their own home is particularly welcome,' said Dr Roderick McKay, Chair of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists' Faculty of Psychiatry of Old Age.

'In the next 20 years the number of Australians over 65 will double, therefore the mental health care of older people is an important part of in the mental health reform agenda. Planning for the mental health needs of older people and access to mental health care is critical to mitigate against poor mental health outcomes,' said Dr McKay

'Focus on this important area is welcomed, and needs to be built upon so that there is comprehensive support for the mental health of older people. As Minister for Mental Health and Ageing, as well as Social Inclusion, Minister Butler would appear to have an almost unique opportunity to achieve this,' said Dr McKay.

'Older people need to be included in all mental health planning to improve their quality of care, remove discrimination and obtain better understanding of the mental health needs of older Australians. It is vital these issues be considered in the government's Ten Year Roadmap for Mental Health Reform,' said Dr McKay.

'Untreated mental illness robs older Australians of their quality of life, physical health and independence at significant cost to individuals, family and community. While there are effective mental health treatments for older people, limited resources can deny them equitable access. Australia owes its older citizens and their families adequate support, respect, and dignity,' said Dr McKay.

'To improve the quality of mental health care for older people we require national benchmarks for the availability and quality of mental health services for older people, and need national principles for providing coordinated care across different services for older Australians with mental illness. Basic mental health training for people working with older Australian is also essential,' said Dr McKay.

For further information Kirrily Johns +61 3 9601 4940

About The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP) is the principal organisation representing the medical specialty of psychiatry in Australia and New Zealand and has responsibility for training, examining and awarding the qualification of Fellowship of the College to medical practitioners.

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Dementia study by Royal Aust College

Dementia " the most serious health crisis this century"

Alzheimers New Zealand urges New Zealand government to recognise dementia as the most serious health crisis to be faced this century

Alzheimers New Zealand is encouraged by the Australian federal governments recent announcement that they will be committing almost AUS $270 million to dementia and hopes this announcement will go some way toward influencing our own government to take further financial action in New Zealand.

Under an aged-care reform package the Australian government will spend a total of $269.4 million over five years, including $164.3 million to be paid as supplements to people with dementia living in aged-care facilities and at home. The remainder of the money will go toward promoting early diagnosis of the disease. However, this amount this falls short of calls by Alzheimer's Australia for a $500m investment.

This financial commitment from the Australian government coupled with the recent announcement from the UK government that they will be doubling funding for dementia research, shows how other governments are stepping up and taking action to prepare for the inevitable rise in dementia. Alzheimers New Zealand is now urging our own government to take action and recognise dementia as the most serious health crisis to be faced this century.

A report released this month by the World Health Organisation (WHO) revealed the incidence of dementia is exploding in line with the rapid growth in aging populations worldwide, the most profound socio-economic phenomenon of this century. The number of people living with dementia worldwide, estimated at 35.6 million in 2010, is set to nearly double every 20 years, reaching 65.7 million in 2030 and 115.4 million in 2050.

In New Zealand, dementia is expected to increase to epidemic proportions in the very near future due to our countrys aging population. Today there around 44,000 recorded cases of dementia, however, we expect the true figure to be significantly higher than this as only 60% of people are diagnosed, according to the World Alzheimer Report 2011. Around half of all New Zealanders with dementia live with family carers, many of whom are providing around-the-clock care with little or no government support.

Alzheimers New Zealand is now approaching the third year of its National Dementia Strategy, launched at Parliament in May 2010. The strategy establishes clear actions to better support people with dementia and their carers. The document was developed in consultation with stakeholders throughout the sector, as well as with those who face the daily challenge of living with the disease. The strategy identifies key areas needing investment including early diagnosis and management of the disease, appropriate quality services, better supports for carers who provide in-home care, and development of a skilled work-force.

The success of the National Dementia Strategy hinges on the New Zealand governments recognition of the social and economic impacts of the disease and adopting dementia as a national health priority. While the New Zealand dementia community is working towards fulfilling the action points of the strategy, the New Zealand government is yet to formally adopt it.

The New Zealand government needs to recognise dementia as a national crisis in order to adequately fund the sector and best prepare for the significant costs of dementia in the future.

Last years Budget announcement of $44m to dementia was a step in the right direction but additional funding is needed to support people living with dementia in the home, says Alzheimers New Zealand chairperson, Martin Brooks.

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Dementia " the most serious health crisis this century"

Bakewells and dogs vs dementia

26 April 2012 Last updated at 02:44 ET By James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News

The drifting smells of a Bakewell tart, guide dogs for the mind and hi-tech wristbands could all have a future in helping people with dementia.

They are some of the winners of a competition by the Design Council and the Department of Health to develop new ideas in care.

The winners are all prototypes, but the aim is to produce them on a mass scale.

David Cameron has described dementia as a "national crisis" which affects 800,000 people in the UK.

The slow death of the brain in dementia affects memory, language and understanding. One of the problems can be forgetting to eat, which is what one of the design ideas is trying to overcome.

The "Ode" project works on the same principle as smells wafting from the kitchen making you hungry. It pumps fragrances of food into the air to whet the appetite of people who are not eating.

Lizzie Olstrom, who is part of the design team, told the BBC: "So much of appetite is about smell, the sensory anticipation of food. [Ode] uses fragrances to re-awaken appetite."

So far they have used smells of a Bakewell tart, citrus and spices. However, the tempting aroma of fish and chips has not translated so well. "Would you want vinegar and wet paper smells in the house?" she asked.

So far, she said the product had "compelling results" after being tested in homes. However, larger-scale tests will be needed to see if the product really helps people.

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Bakewells and dogs vs dementia

MULTIMEDIA SPECIAL: Don't forget Yarra Ranges dementia sufferers

>> MULTIMEDIA SPECIAL: Love amid loss as dementia takes hold

FRIGHTENING new statistics reveal the number of residents in the Yarra Ranges with dementia is expected to skyrocket by 298 per cent by 2050.

The figures, commissioned by Alzheimers Australia Vic, project the number of Yarra Ranges residents living with dementia will grow from 1543 to more than 6000 in less than 40 years, placing a heavy toll on the districts medical and care services.

The shock figures come as Caladenia Dementia Care in Mooroolbark campaigns for $1.7 million funding to build a dementia-specific overnight respite centre.

Manager Sarah Yeates said there was an enormous and growing need for the centre.

The care that happens in nursing homes is just not suitable for people with dementia, especially for those in the early stages, Ms Yeates said.

She said they were seeing an increasing demand for their services particularly from younger people, with their youngest patient just 34.

The community has already raised $85,000 for the project, but Ms Yeates said they were continuing to appeal for funding from state and federal governments.

Among those who will benefit from respite care is Coldstreams Gerda and Marty De Clercq (pictured).

Two-and-a-half years ago Mr De Clercq, 68, was diagnosed with dementia and his wife is his sole carer.

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MULTIMEDIA SPECIAL: Don't forget Yarra Ranges dementia sufferers

Commonly used dementia drugs can help more patients with Alzheimer's

Public release date: 7-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Katherine Barnes katherine.barnes@kcl.ac.uk 44-207-848-3076 King's College London

The dementia drug donepezil (Aricept), already widely used to treat mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, can also help in moderate to severe patients, according to a report funded by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) and the Alzheimer's Society. The study suggests that extending treatment to this group could help treat twice as many sufferers worldwide. Encouragingly, the drug has greater positive benefits for patients more severely affected than for those in the earlier stages of dementia.

It is estimated that 18 million people worldwide suffer from Alzheimer's disease, which is the most common cause of dementia. According to the World Health Organization, of the 35 million people currently living with dementia globally, 58% live in low- and middle-income countries and by 2050 this figure is projected to reach 71% of the total.

The multi-centre UK study, led by Professor Robert Howard at King's College London, is the first trial to demonstrate the value of continued drug intervention for those patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer's disease who have deteriorated beyond the point where donepezil is currently recommended.

The study, to be published in the New England Journal of Medicine, looked at two drugs: donepezil and memantine. Donepezil is the most commonly prescribed of the dementia drugs and is recommended for patients at the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease. Doctors are currently advised to stop prescribing donepezil when the disease progresses to become moderate to severe and until now there has been no clear evidence that continuing treatment is of benefit to patients.

Over the course of the trial, patients who continued to take donepezil showed considerably less decline in cognition memory, orientation, language function and function (retained ability to carry out simple daily tasks and self-care) than those taking a placebo drug. The benefits seen with continued treatment were clinically important and were greater than those previously seen in patients with less severe Alzheimer's disease. Whilst the effect was slightly smaller, starting memantine treatment also resulted in significantly better cognitive and functional abilities compared with those taking a placebo.

Professor Robert Howard, lead author from the Institute of Psychiatry at King's says: "As patients progress to more severe forms of Alzheimer's disease, clinicians are faced with a difficult decision as to whether to continue or not with dementia drugs and, until now, there has been little evidence to guide that decision. For the first time, we have robust and compelling evidence that treatment with these drugs can continue to help patients at the later, more severe stages of the disease. We observed that patients who continued taking donepezil were better able to remember, understand, communicate and perform daily tasks for at least a year longer than those who stopped taking the drugs. These improvements were noticeable to patients, their caregivers and doctors. Both donepezil and memantine will soon be off patent and available in very cheap generic preparations. These findings will greatly increase the numbers of patients in the developed and developing world that we are able to treat."

Professor Nick Fox, MRC Senior Clinical Fellow at the Institute of Neurology, University College London, says: "The number of people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia is reaching critical levels. It has never been more important to invest in research which will enable doctors to make informed decisions based on the best evidence possible when deciding what treatments to give patients. The MRC has an ongoing commitment to the development of effective, safe treatments that will improve the quality of life for people with Alzheimer's disease and their care givers."

Professor Clive Ballard, Director of Research at Alzheimer's Society, says: "Thanks to the Alzheimer's drug donepezil, tens of thousands of people in the early to moderate stages of the condition are able to recognise their family for longer, play with their grandchildren and make vital plans for the future. This major new trial now shows that there could also be significant benefits on continuing the treatment into the later stages too. There are 750,000 people with dementia in the UK yet currently prescription levels of Alzheimer's drugs are still low. If this is to change we have to improve the shocking diagnosis rates and ensure everyone is given the opportunity to try treatments."

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Commonly used dementia drugs can help more patients with Alzheimer's

DEMENTIA CARE: the cost of caring in the west

DEMENTIA will become Australias most expensive medical condition over the next 40 years, with annual costs predicted to balloon from $6 billion this year to about $83 billion by 2050.

Alzheimers Australia Vic chief executive Maree McCabe said aged care for a dementia patient cost about $21,500 each year and would increase exponentially with wages, treatment and interventions.

Governments know what we need, the time has come now to outline a funding plan for it - not for the next year or five years, but for over the next decade to 20 years, Ms McCabe said.

The Federal Government terminated The Dementia Initiative - making dementia a national health priority in its 2011-12 Budget.

Last week, the Federal Government announced $268.4 million over five years to tackle dementia.

This includes $164.3 million for people receiving home care packages and in residential care, and there will also be extra support for primary health care providers.

However this falls short of the $500 million over five years called for by Alzheimers Australia.

We need to increase our services, Ms McCabe said.

We need to raise awareness about dementia, especially when it comes to ensuring people achieve a timely diagnosis.

National Ageing Research Institute director Prof David Ames said huge advances had been made in understanding the biology of dementia, but treatments remained limited.

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DEMENTIA CARE: the cost of caring in the west

Dementia care model that reduces hospitalizations successfully translated into practice

Public release date: 31-May-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Cindy Fox Aisen caisen@iupui.edu 317-274-7722 Indiana University School of Medicine

INDIANAPOLIS -- An innovative model of dementia care that significantly reduces emergency department visits and hospitalizations, and encourages use of medications that are not harmful to older brains, has now been used to treat over 1,000 patients. The Aging Brain Care model was developed by researcher-clinicians from the Regenstrief Institute and the Indiana University School of Medicine.

Extending the definition of a patient to include family members who enable cognitively impaired individuals to live in the community, physicians, nurses, social workers and other staff members work closely with both the older adult and family caregivers -- in the exam room and in the home, as well as over the phone and via email -- to deliver care to improve both brain and physical health.

This month, the 1,000th patient was seen at the Wishard Healthy Aging Brain Center, the first facility to use the ABC model. The Healthy Aging Brain Center is both a research lab and a treatment facility focused on the mental status of elder adults. The center has seen reductions of 45 percent in hospital emergency department visits and 54 percent in hospitalization stays in patients compared to similar individuals not seen in the center.

"Patients treated utilizing the ABC model have fewer behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia after one year than they had at the onset of treatment," said Regenstrief investigator Malaz Boustani, M.D., associate professor of medicine at the IU School of Medicine and the medical director of the Wishard center.

Patients receiving care in the Healthy Aging Brain Center are given an initial cognitive assessment including neuropsychological testing, an MRI, a medication review and a structured neurological and physical evaluation. The staff then helps both patient and caregivers develop a personal treatment plan that typically includes recognizing potentially harmful medications, prescribing new medications, initiating brain and physical exercise regimens, and working on reducing stress to improve daily life.

"Our research over the past decade has shown the importance of families and communities, in addition to medical care, in improving the quality of life for older adults with dementia," said Regenstrief investigator Christopher Callahan, M.D., Cornelius and Yvonne Pettinga Professor in Aging Research at the IU School of Medicine. "The HABC uses a team-based approach to help get everyone on the same page in meeting the goals of care for the patient and their family caregivers."

Dr. Callahan sees patients at the Healthy Aging Brain Center and is also founding director of the IU Center for Aging Research.

The Healthy Aging Brain Center receives referrals from across the country and has quickly become a nationally recognized leader in the care of older adults, according to Dr. Boustani, a geriatrician.

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Dementia care model that reduces hospitalizations successfully translated into practice

Alzheimer's, Dementia Care to Cost U.S. $200 Billion This Year

THURSDAY, March 8 (HealthDay News) -- Caring for people with Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia will cost the United States about $200 billion this year, a total that includes $140 billion paid by Medicare and Medicaid, new statistics released Thursday show.

Medicaid payments are 19 times higher for seniors with Alzheimer's and other dementias and Medicare payments for the conditions are nearly three times higher, compared to payments for other patients, according to the "2012 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures" report from the Alzheimer's Association.

Nearly 30 percent of people with Alzheimer's and other dementias are covered by both Medicare and Medicaid, compared to 11 percent of people without the conditions. This means that Medicare and Medicaid costs associated with Alzheimer's and other dementias will continue to rise as baby boomers age, the report said.

"Alzheimer's is already a crisis, and it's growing worse with every year," Harry Johns, president and CEO of the Alzheimer's Association, said in an association news release.

"While lives affected and care costs soar, the cost of doing nothing is far greater than acting now. Alzheimer's is a tremendous cost-driver for families and for Medicare and Medicaid. This crisis simply cannot be allowed to reach its maximum scale because it will overwhelm an already overburdened system," Johns added.

Most people with Alzheimer's and other dementias have at least one other serious chronic health problem, and Alzheimer's acts as a "cost multiplier" on these other diseases, according to the report.

For example, the statistics showed a senior with diabetes and Alzheimer's costs Medicare 81 percent more than a senior with diabetes alone. And a senior with cancer and Alzheimer's costs Medicare 53 percent more than a senior with cancer alone.

Mental impairment in patients with Alzheimer's and other dementias complicates the management of care, resulting in more and longer hospital stays, the authors noted in the news release.

"This disease must be addressed on parallel tracks: supporting research to find treatments that cure, delay or prevent the disease, and offering assistance and support to the more than 5 million Americans now living with Alzheimer's and their more than 15 million caregivers," Johns said.

"This is what the National Alzheimer's Plan is all about. Caring for people with Alzheimer's and other dementias costs America $200 billion in just one year. By committing just 1 percent of that cost, $2 billion, to research, it could begin to put the nation on a path to effective treatments and, ultimately, a cure," he noted.

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Alzheimer's, Dementia Care to Cost U.S. $200 Billion This Year

Dementia patients may go without drugs

DEMENTIA patients fear they will no longer have access to life-improving treatments after the Government announced it would review the cost-effectiveness of subsidising drugs for sufferers.

The Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC) announced on Monday it would review all medications available to dementia sufferers under the Government's Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS).

The announcement followed an initial review by the committee that found "these medicines were being prescribed to a much larger population for longer periods of time than was originally agreed as cost-effective by the PBAC".

Alzheimer's Australia says patients and their carers are worried the review may mean the drugs will no longer be discounted and will become unaffordable.

"People with dementia and carers are alarmed by the announcement of this review," Alzheimer's Australia CEO Glenn Rees told AAP today.

"That's quite a lot for many of these people because they would have lost their incomes or they'll be on pensions," he said.

Mr Rees said sufferers are concerned the review may be part of the Government's cost-cutting measures.

Alzheimer's Australia president Ita Buttrose, who cared for her father who suffered from vascular dementia, said carers were particularly concerned about what the review may mean.

"What those drugs do is improve the quality of life for a person with dementia," Ms Buttrose told AAP today.

"It adds another stress to the whole business of caring. They're thinking now the drugs aren't going to be available."

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Dementia patients may go without drugs

For Elders With Dementia, Musical Awakenings

Enlarge Michael Rossato-Bennett

Joe, a nursing home resident, broke into song during a personalized music session. His story and others are documented in the film Alive Inside.

Joe, a nursing home resident, broke into song during a personalized music session. His story and others are documented in the film Alive Inside.

Henry, an elderly Alzheimer's patient in an American nursing home, recently became a viral star. In a short video that has been viewed millions of times online, he starts out slumped over and unresponsive but undergoes a remarkable transformation as he listens to music on a pair of headphones.

The clip is part of a documentary called Alive Inside, which follows social worker Dan Cohen as he creates personalized iPod playlists for people in elder care facilities, hoping to reconnect them with the music they love. Cohen tells NPR's Melissa Block that the video of Henry is a great example of the link between music and memory.

"He is able to actually answer questions and speak about his youth, and this is sort of the magic of music that's familiar for those with dementia," Cohen says. "Even though Alzheimer's and various forms of dementia will ravage many parts of the brain, long-term memory of music from when one was young remains very often. So if you tap that, you really get that kind of awakening response. It's pretty exciting to see."

Cohen says his goal is to make access to personalized music the standard of care at nursing facilities. An early concern, he says, was that headphones might isolate the patients even further. But when he first implemented the project on a large scale in 2008, putting 200 iPods in four facilities around New York, he got the opposite result: a flood of stories from the staff about increased socialization.

"People wanted to share their music with others: 'Here, you've gotta listen to this,' or 'What was the name of that song?' " Cohen says. "The music is great, but to me, perhaps the even bigger win is people having better and more relationships with those around them."

Get the playlist right. Find out the person's tastes and create a varied mix: no more than five to seven songs per artist. Have them weed out tracks that are so-so, so you end up with 100 or 200 songs that all resonate.

Keep it simple. Make sure the elder knows how to use the player, or that someone nearby can help. Use over-ear headphones rather than earbuds, which can fall out.

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For Elders With Dementia, Musical Awakenings

Agencies demand curbs on drugs for dementia

June 04--Many institutionalized dementia patients are known to lash out as part of their condition -- to strike the aides trying to feed or clean them, to yell at other patients, to aggressively resist intrusive but necessary medical care such as IVs and catheters.

They are also known to be heavily medicated to control such behavior, a practice that government officials, nursing home industry leaders and patient care advocates say needs to be curbed.

The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS, and the others announced an initiative last week designed to reduce use of antipsychotic drugs on nursing home patients with dementia by 15 percent by year's end. Too often, they say, the staffs of long-term care facilities have relied on the medications to control behavior of patients with Alzheimer's or a similar disease instead of trying other methods, even though the health of those residents can be damaged.

"It's often related to care activities in which the [patient] becomes frightened, bewildered, apprehensive, very anxious -- they don't know what's happening and may resist care or may actually strike out," said Jules Rosen, chief of geriatric psychiatry at UPMC. "What has happened culturally is the knee-jerk reaction of many staff and many doctors is to prescribe these drugs, that it will calm them down. It serves that purpose for some people, and doesn't for others."

The two leading trade groups representing nursing homes, the American Health Care Association and LeadingAge, endorsed the CMS initiative and said they would work with the government to help steer facilities toward other methods with difficult patients. By July, the federal agency plans to list on its website devoted to nursing home comparisons the statistics describing each facility's use of antipsychotic medications on dementia patients.

"We're seeing a number of facilities steer away from these medications, but it's still way too high," said David Gifford, the AHCA's senior vice president of quality and regulatory affairs. "One of the biggest challenges is many clinicians, physicians, nurses and family members think these medications are necessary and effective, but data suggest otherwise."

A CMS report on the issue found that nearly 40 percent of nursing patients with signs of dementia in 2010 received antipsychotic drugs when they did not have any of the conditions for which the medications were government-approved, such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. It also stated more than 17 percent of nursing home residents had daily doses of the drugs exceeding recommended levels.

The new initiative calls upon nursing homes to assign consistent staff that gets to know the patients better and can more reliably understand their needs, considering the difficulty many dementia patients have in expressing themselves. Facilities are also being urged to devote more time to alternative behavioral solutions such as music therapy, exercise and other social activities.

Claire Curry, a legal director for the Legal Aid Justice Center, which advocates for patients, said the nursing homes need to learn "to not reach for a magic pill that's going to tranquilize someone, but use these other tools I'm so happy to see CMS pushing. The drug should always be a very last resort."

Government and medical officials note that while commonly used antipsychotic medications such as risperidone and olanzapine can be beneficial, they have not been proved to have the same value for dementia patients as for their intended use and there can be more harmful side effects for patients with Alzheimer's or similar conditions.

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Agencies demand curbs on drugs for dementia

Govt to boost funds for dementia care

The government is set to announce new funding for dementia care and diagnosis as part of an overhaul of the aged-care sector.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard is set to unveil measures for aged care including a shift in focus from aged homes to in-home care.

The plan will also reduce pressure on the elderly to sell their homes and wealthy Australians will be required to chip in more for the cost of their care.

But the strategy is likely to ignore key parts of a Productivity Commission report released in August 2011, including a five-year reform timetable and a $60,000 cap on out-of-pocket care costs, government sources say.

The cash for dementia falls well short of the plea from Alzheimer's Australia for $500 million.

The government will spend $268.4 million over five years on dementia, including $164.3 million to be paid as supplements to sufferers in aged-care facilities and at home, Fairfax reports.

The remainder will promote early diagnosis over the disease.

Ms Gillard and Aged Care Minister Mark Butler will address the media on Friday morning.

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott said the government would be making the elderly pay more for aged care.

He told the Nine Network the prime minister was announcing 'big new additional charges' for people going into aged-care facilities.

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Govt to boost funds for dementia care

Labour in dementia pledge

Eric Baxter Published 20 Apr 2012 16:00

LABOUR'S 11 candidates for next month's council elections have all signed up to Alzheimer Scotland's pledge to make dementia a priority in their ward.

The issue of dementia care has already been raised in the campaign by independent candidate Peter Campbell, who highlighted his wife's experience as a sufferer of the condition last week.

Labour's Inverclyde South West contender, Councillor Gerry Dorrian, who sits on the Inverclyde Community Health and Care Partnership, said his party was committed to delivering the best services possible for affected families.

Mr Dorrian said: "Like Alzheimer Scotland, Inverclyde Labour believe that people with dementia, their carers and families are entitled to be treated with dignity and respect.

"They should be supported by skilled workers who understand the illness and be included in their local communities."

Mr Dorrian said over the past five years Labour have launched the Inverclyde Dementia Support and Development Service to provide continuous support, information and education to people coming to terms with dementia and their carers.

He added: "We recognise that more needs to be done.

"We pledge to continue to improve services for people with dementia to better meet their needs, and to work to remove the stigma that surrounds dementia by making Inverclyde a 'Dementia Friendly Community'.

"Labour councillors will ensure our most vulnerable citizens receive the standards of care they deserve."

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Labour in dementia pledge