For Elders With Dementia, Music Sparks Great 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, Music Sparks Great Awakenings

Dementia is a national crisis like HIV and cancer, says David Cameron

As the NHS struggles with this cost, Mr Cameron plans to improve research on living with dementia and fund a new academic centre for scientists to investigate the causes of the condition.

He also wants to encourage people to volunteer for brain scanning to help identify the signs of early onset.

We did it with cancer in the 70s. With HIV in the 80s and 90s, he will say. We fought the stigma, stepped up to the challenge and made massive in-roads into fighting these killers.

Now weve got to do the same with dementia. This is a personal priority of mine.

The number of people suffering from the condition is likely to reach a million within a decade, but only around one in four will get a correct diagnosis.

Dementia is simply a terrible disease, he will say. And it is a scandal that we as a country havent kept pace with it. The level of diagnosis, understanding and awareness of dementia is shockingly low. It is as though weve been in collective denial.

So my argument today is that weve got to treat this like the national crisis it is. We need an all-out fight-back against this disease; one that cuts across society."

Shirley Cramer, chief executive of Alzheimers Research UK, said the new money was crucial to "if we are to avert the drastic economic costs of dementia that lie in wait".

Emergency hospital admissions for dementia sufferers have risen sharply in recent years.

Experts say the increasing number of admissions is costly to the NHS and in many cases unnecessary, as well as traumatic for vulnerable patients.

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Dementia is a national crisis like HIV and cancer, says David Cameron

Time to act as dementia crisis looms, says report

Alzheimer's Australia is calling on the federal government to implement a national awareness campaign calling on all Australians to have a health care plan set in place for when they can no longer manage it themselves.

WITH dementia rates set to soar, it is imperative more Australians plan for when they can no longer manage their health care, end-of-life care, or financial affairs, a new report says.

Only about 55 per cent of Australians have a will, and an even smaller proportion have recorded their wishes in legally binding directives about nursing, guardianship, or power of attorney arrangements.

The report, by Alzheimer's Australia, calls on the federal government to implement a national awareness campaign about planning.

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It also wants general practitioners to take a bigger role in providing patients, especially those in the early stage of dementia, with information about the importance of ''putting things in order'' while they have the capacity to express their wishes.

The organisation wants to make it a condition of access to nursing homes, and some in-home aged care services, that such arrangements have been made.

''This is not a topic that we, as a population, generally like to talk about,'' the chief executive of Alzheimer's Australia, John Watkins, said. ''And we know from our members that many don't talk about it until it's too late.''

The report reveals a looming dementia epidemic for NSW, with the number of people with the condition set to increase from 95,000 to 303,500 by 2050. A separate analysis shows the electorates expected to be most affected include Tweed, Port Macquarie, Myall Lakes, Bega, Wyong and Port Stephens, with projected increases of up to 400 per cent.

Recent interviews with carers, people with dementia and service providers showed they did not understand the value of planning, did not know where to access information, and did not receive support from GPs and health professionals to do so, the report says.

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Time to act as dementia crisis looms, says report

Thomson Reuters Identifies United Kingdom as a Leader in Dementia Research

Amid high-caliber research output and citation impact, analysis reveals region has unfilled potential to accelerate dementia cure

Philadelphia, PA, London, UK, March 20, 2012 - The Intellectual Property & Science business of Thomson Reuters today announced findings that the quality of dementia research in the United Kingdom (UK) is second in the world only to the United States, despite the low number of scientists working in this field, and that finding a cure can be accelerated by increasing the number of dementia researchers and investment, according to work done using the Thomson Reuters Web of Knowledge(TM). The findings are featured in an Alzheimer`s UK Research Report "Defeating Dementia."

The results from the analysis reveal the UK published more research on dementia than any other country except the United States and ranks second in the world after Sweden in citation impact, which is the number of times UK research is referenced in dementia studies around the globe. Despite its high performance and influence, dementia research capacity in the UK is low when compared to cancer, stroke and heart disease. For every dementia research scientist there are six who work on cancer.

"Research output and citation impact in scientific literature is an ideal way to measure the quality and capacity of dementia research," said Karen Gurney, manager of bibliometric reporting at Thomson Reuters and analyst of this report. "This project illuminated an interesting dementia-research landscape in the UK, where this region is clearly playing an influential role despite its size."

The research study was commissioned by the UK`s leading dementia research charity, Alzheimer`s Research UK, in an effort to raise awareness and increase investment for the underfunded field. The data measuring the quality and size of dementia research in the UK was compiled by Thomson Reuters. Issued by Alzheimer`s UK, the report, Defeating Dementia, also outlines 14 recommendations to the UK government based on feedback from scientists working in the field.

"The data provided by Thomson Reuters have been extremely valuable in allowing Alzheimer`s Research UK to uncover the facts about dementia research output and quality in the UK," said Simon Ridley, head of research at Alzheimer`s Research UK. "We wanted to dig deep into the issue of UK research capacity in this field. The work carried out by Thomson Reuters enabled us to do this and make a strong case for more investment in dementia research."

Rebecca Wood, chief executive, Alzheimer`s Research UK, concurs. "Alzheimer`s Research UK relies on robust data to support its expertise. The data provided by Thomson Reuters allowed us to present an in-depth picture of UK dementia research in a global context over the last fifty years. It has been very well-received by a range of stakeholders, including government and other research funders."

To view the Alzheimer`s Research UK report, Defeating Dementia, visit: http://www.alzheimersresearchuk.org.

Thomson Reuters Thomson Reuters is the world`s leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals. We combine industry expertise with innovative technology to deliver critical information to leading decision makers in the financial, legal, tax and accounting, healthcare and science, and media markets, powered by the world`s most trusted news organization.With headquarters in New York and major operations in London and Eagan, Minnesota, Thomson Reuters employs more than 55,000 people and operates in over 100 countries. Thomson Reuters shares are listed on the Toronto and New York Stock Exchanges. For more information, go to http://www.thomsonreuters.com.

Alzheimer`s Research UK Alzheimer`s Research UK is the UK`s leading dementia research charity. As research experts, we fund world-class, pioneering scientists at leading universities to find preventions, treatments and a cure for dementia. Our findings improve the lives of everyone affected by dementia now and in the future. We forge partnerships with Government and other key organizations to make dementia research a national priority.

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Thomson Reuters Identifies United Kingdom as a Leader in Dementia Research

Arcadia sex offender with dementia is reported missing

Arcadia police are searching for a convicted sex offender with dementia who went missing last week.

James Randall McCain, 58, was last seen at his home on Huntington Drive in Arcadia on March 12, police said. He was reported missing the next day.

After visiting the residence this weekend, police do not believe he has returned there since his disappearance.

McCain has been registered in Arcadia as a sex offender for a long time, said Sgt. Dan Crowther, and has never been a problem. Police said he usually gets around by foot and is not known to drive. He has a conviction for lewd and lascivious acts on a child under 14, KTLA-TV reported.

Police are asking anyone with more information about his whereabouts to contact the Arcadia Police Department at (626) 574-5156.

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Arcadia sex offender with dementia is reported missing

Cameron Pledges Huge Dementia Research Funding Boost

David Cameron has called the problem of dementia a "national crisis"

Funding for research into dementia is to be more than doubled by 2015 in a bid to make Britain a world leader in the field, David Cameron will announce.

The prime minister will declare on Monday that tackling the "national crisis" posed by the disease is one of his personal priorities.

He will say it is a "scandal" that the UK has not done more to address dementia, which is thought to affect 670,000 people although about 400,000 have not been diagnosed and do not know they have it. The cost to UK society is estimated at 23 billion.

Over the next 10 years, the number with the disease is expected to rise to one million.

Launching a "national challenge on dementia", Mr Cameron will set out plans to step up research into cures and treatments and to ensure that the health and social care systems are equipped to deal with the problem.

Overall funding for dementia research is to reach 66m by 2015, from 26.6 in 2010.

"One of the greatest challenges of our time is what I'd call the quiet crisis, one that steals lives and tears at the hearts of families, but that relative to its impact is hardly acknowledged," he will say.

"Dementia is simply a terrible disease. And it is a scandal that we as a country haven't kept pace with it. The level of diagnosis, understanding and awareness of dementia is shockingly low. It is as though we've been in collective denial."

The prime minister will say that the costs associated with the disease are already higher than those for cancer, heart disease or stroke.

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Cameron Pledges Huge Dementia Research Funding Boost

Pat Summitt's talks about her early onset dementia diagnosis – Video

23-08-2011 13:28 University of Tennessee women's basketball coach Pat Summitt talks about her diagnosis of early onset dementia in a video statement recorded on Monday, Aug. 21, 2011, at her Blount County home. Courtesy of the University of Tennessee Read the related story: http://www.govolsxtra.com

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Pat Summitt's talks about her early onset dementia diagnosis - Video

Study finds key dementia drugs should be used more

LONDON (Reuters) - Pfizer's dementia drug Aricept, already commonly used to treat mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, can also help patients with severe disease and should be used more widely and for longer, according to research published on Wednesday.

British scientists who studied the possible longer-term benefits of giving Aricept suggested that extending treatment could help twice as many Alzheimer's sufferers worldwide.

The study also looked at another commonly used dementia drug called memantine, which is sold in the United States under the brand Namenda by Forest Laboratories and Germany's Merz, and in Britain under the brand Ebixa by Danish group Lundbeck.

It found that keeping patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer's on Aricept, or donepezil as it is known generically, or starting them on memantine treatment, meant they had significantly better cognitive and function abilities than patients taking a placebo or dummy pill.

An estimated 18 million people worldwide suffer from Alzheimer's disease, which is the most common form of dementia. It is fatal brain disease that affects memory, thinking, behaviour and the ability to handle daily activities and is placing an increasingly heavy burden on societies and economies across the world.

According to the World Health Organisation, some 35 million people worldwide have dementia, and Alzheimer's Disease International predicts that as populations age, dementia cases will almost double every 20 years to around 66 million in 2030 and 115 million in 2050.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, involved 295 Alzheimer's patients in Britain who were assigned to one of four separate groups - one continuing to take donepezil, one stopping donepezil and getting a placebo, one stopping donepezil and starting memantine, and a fourth taking both drugs together.

Robert Howard, a professor at King's College London who led the trial, said it was the first to show the value of continued drug treatment for patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer's.

While donepezil is commonly prescribed for patients in the early stages of the disease, doctors in some countries, including Britain, are advised to stop prescribing the drug to patients once their disease has progressed to become more severe.

"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," Howard told reporters at a briefing abut his findings.

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Study finds key dementia drugs should be used more

Dementia/Alzheimer's: Why Activities Matter – Video

26-09-2011 07:50 This DVD is available now at Amazon. Visit http://www.amazon.com . This video clip is an excerpt of "Filling the Day with Meaning", a 2.5 hour training DVD for Alzheimer's/Dementia Caregivers, with Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA. Use engaging activities to give back moments of joy and happiness to patients with special challenges, such as those with early onset, tendencies for elopement, falls, and more. Learn the difference between simple entertainment and engaging projects that stimulate brain activity. This workshop full of indispensable ideas and tips on how to give moments of joy. Learn - what makes an engaging activity - how to build care partner skills - how to create an inviting and safe environment - which key activities to consider at different disease stages - how to successfully handle challenging cases, such as early onset and men and much more "Filling the Day with Meaning" is presented by The Pines Education Institute of SW Florida and facilitated by Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA. The Pines Education Insitute is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to providing education, outreach programs, support, resources and counseling to family members and geriatric caregivers. For more information please visit http://www.pinesofsarasota.org.

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Dementia/Alzheimer's: Why Activities Matter - Video

Dementia planning left too late – report

Rates of dementia are set to triple in Australia by 2050 but people still aren't doing enough to prepare for care, a new report warns.

In a discussion paper given to the state government, Alzheimer's Australia NSW estimates the number of Australians diagnosed with dementia will rise from 280,000 to around 943,000 by 2050.

Of these, 303,500 people will be from NSW.

But despite the prevalence of the disease, the report said only 55 per cent of people in NSW have a will and less than 20 per cent of Australians have recorded their wishes for end-of-life care.

John Watkins, CEO of Alzheimer's Australia NSW, said people were often leaving it too late, placing added burden of family and friends.

'This is not a topic that we as a population generally like to talk about,' he said in a statement.

'And we know from our members that many don't talk about it until it is too late.'

The report, which surveyed 77 carers, patients and service providers, found that people were confused about where to access information and didn't understand the differences between legal documents, such as power of attorney or advance care directive.

'These are consistent with what we hear from our clients and members in our day-to-day work,' Mr Watkins said.

In response, Alzheimer's Australia NSW has made many recommendations, including the need for a national awareness campaign promoting planning ahead.

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Dementia planning left too late - report

Dementia rates set to triple

RATES of dementia are set to triple in Australia by 2050 but people still aren't doing enough to prepare for care, a new report warns.

In a discussion paper given to the State Government, Alzheimer's Australia NSW estimates the number of Australians diagnosed with dementia will rise from 280,000 to around 943,000 by 2050.

Of these, 303,500 people will be from NSW.

But despite the prevalence of the disease, the report said only 55 per cent of people in NSW have a will and less than 20 per cent of Australians have recorded their wishes for end-of-life care.

John Watkins, CEO of Alzheimer's Australia NSW, said people were often leaving it too late, placing added burden of family and friends.

"This is not a topic that we as a population generally like to talk about," he said. "And we know from our members that many don't talk about it until it is too late."

The report, which surveyed 77 carers, patients and service providers, found that people were confused about where to access information and didn't understand the differences between legal documents, such as power of attorney or advance care directive.

"These are consistent with what we hear from our clients and members in our day-to-day work," Mr Watkins said.

In response, Alzheimer's Australia NSW has made many recommendations, including the need for a national awareness campaign promoting planning ahead.

The report comes as new figures from Deloitte Access Economics NSW released today found that the electoral divisions of Tweed, Port Macquarie and Myall Lakes will have the highest rates of dementia respectively in the state by 2050.

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Dementia rates set to triple

Doctors 'acting like vets with dementia patients': Damning report reveals communication failure of medical staff

Some doctors believe sufferers 'don't suffer pain in the same way' Nurse found by researchers reprimanding elderly dementia sufferer for losing more weight

By Sophie Borland

Last updated at 11:29 PM on 27th February 2012

Doctors and nurses caring for dementia patients often ‘make it up as they go along’ because they have no idea how to treat them, a study has revealed.

The shaming research lifts the lid on attitudes to dealing with vulnerable patients and reports a series of disturbing admissions about how little regard some health professionals have for those suffering in later life.

One consultant admitted to using a ‘veterinary approach’ towards the sick.

Shaming: The report on dementia care exposes doctors' attitudes to the elderly and is based on lengthy interviews with medics in Nottingham (picture posed by models)

Another said dementia patients are ‘hugely sapping of our scarce resources’ as ‘they can’t do anything for themselves’.

Others have disclosed that, although many of their patients have dementia, they have not ‘ever, ever had any teaching’ in how to properly look after them.

 

Some even believed that people with dementia do not suffer pain in the same way as those without the condition.

The candid admissions have been made to academics undertaking an extensive study on attitudes of hospital staff towards the elderly with dementia.

On one occasion, researchers watched in horror as an old man was reduced to tears by a nurse who reprimanded him for losing too much weight.

Over the past three years, Professor John Gladman and his colleagues at Nottingham University have carried out lengthy interviews with 60 doctors, nurses and other staff at the Queen’s Medical Centre and Nottingham City Hospital.

Their findings have been presented to the authors of a major joint report to be published tomorrow by the NHS Confederation, Age UK and the Local Government Association.

It will demand that patients are treated with respect, in line with the Mail’s Dignity for the Elderly campaign.

One consultant admitted during an interview: ‘Sometimes you’re more veterinary in your approach.

‘And then you perhaps may not be treating them in the same way as someone else that you can talk to.’

In another of the interviews – which each lasted 40 minutes – a consultant said that dementia patients ‘can’t do anything for themselves. They won’t feed themselves, they can’t get out of bed themselves, you can’t be sure they’re drinking, they’re often incontinent.

‘The more of that patient group you have, the less care the others are going to get. They are hugely sapping of our scarce resources.’

The researchers, who began their study in 2008 and will publish it in full later this year, also made detailed notes on how patients were being looked after on wards.

On one occasion, they saw an elderly man with dementia in tears being ‘reprimanded’ by a nurse for losing more weight.

The researchers wrote: ‘He is agitated and frightened, crying with tears down his face.

‘Not one member of staff offers any comfort or reassurance. The staff nurse tuts and reprimands him for losing more weight.’

They also interviewed a young woman whose grandmother was in hospital, who said: ‘We were told by the doctor that people with dementia don’t feel pain as much as somebody who hasn’t got dementia.’

Professor Gladman, who specialises in care of the elderly, said most of the staff had not been trained to look after dementia sufferers and often ‘make it up as they go along’.

But he added that figures show half of patients in hospital over the age of 70 have dementia and half of those who fracture their hip have the illness.

Care: Doctors often simply 'make it up as they go along' - and one doctor admitted taking a 'veterinary approach' towards the sick (picture posed by model)

‘Some people said they had never had any training at all,’ said Professor Gladman. ‘People said they knew the causes of dementia – they could tell you microscopic changes that happen to patients – but they didn’t know what to do. They sort of make it up as they go along.’

He added: ‘The only people who said they were confident had not had training but had experience elsewhere – [they had] worked in a care home or looked after their own parents or grandparents.’

Although the study involved staff in only two hospitals in Nottingham, Professor Gladman said he believes the problems they identified exist across the NHS.

He said that although increasing numbers of patients going to hospital would have dementia in the future – because of the UK’s ageing population – the NHS ‘hasn’t really got to grips with the problem’. ‘The system isn’t prepared for the job it’s got to do,’ he said.

The Mail has consistently called for an improvement in the treatment of older patients as part of our Dignity for the Elderly campaign.

Katherine Murphy, chief executive of the Patients Association, said: ‘It brings shame on the NHS that a consultant can say, in the course of this research, that he avoids talking to dementia patients.

‘Dementia patients need to be treated with dignity and respect.

‘But people contacting us tell us about dementia patients that are being ignored by clinicians, and who they feel are being treated as second-class citizens.

‘It brings shame on our society that so many elderly people, with and without dementia, are treated so poorly in our hospitals.’

 

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Doctors 'acting like vets with dementia patients': Damning report reveals communication failure of medical staff

Health Matters: Differences between Alzheimer's and dementia

FORT MYERS, FL -

Hank Graefen's mother-in-law suffered from dementia. When he and his wife became caretakers in her final years, they studied up on the condition.

"The more you can learn the better you're going to be and you better understand the disease."

Often used interchangeably, both dementia and Alzheimer's are forms of mental degradation. In many ways they seem the same but are actually two different medical terms.

"I tell people that its sort of like dementia is the team and Alzheimer's is one of the players," says Dr. Michael Raab, a geriatrician with Lee Memorial Health System.

Dementia covers a number of disorders; Alzheimer's is most common.

"Depending on who you believe, between 60% and 80% are caused by Alzheimer's disease," says Dr. Raab.

Alzheimer's has physical characteristics in the brain, which most other forms of dementia don't have.

"When you look at the brain, there are tangles and plaques. The Lewy Body dementias, the vascular dementias, the front dementias, none of them really have any plaques or tangles," says Dr. Raab.

What's more, Alzheimer's involves a gradual progression that can begin in middle age. General dementia is usually found in advanced years, Hank's mother-in-law was in her 90s.

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Health Matters: Differences between Alzheimer's and dementia

Dementia statistics set to triple for Tamworth

A DEMENTIA epidemic could be on the horizon for the northern region, as new figures suggest the number of people living with the condition will explode by 283 per cent within the next 40 years.

Statistics released today by Alzheimers Australia NSW predict the Tamworth electorate will have the greatest number of people with dementia in the region, and the 23rd highest prevalence in the state, by 2050.

In the Tamworth area, 1101 people have dementia a figure expected to rise by 218 per cent to 3504 in 2050.

The number of people with dementia in the Northern Tablelands is anticipated to grow from 1124 this year to 3030, an increase of 269 per cent.

Barwons population will have 2304 people living with dementia in 2050, a 257 per cent increase from this years figure of 897.

Across NSW, the number of people living with the condition is expected to more than triple, from about 95,000 to more than 300,000.

Alzheimers Australia NSW chief executive officer John Watkins said the trend was driven by demographic changes.

The general population in both the state and northern region was getting older, he said, so more people would develop the condition.

The older you get, the higher the chance you have of getting dementia, Mr Watkins said.

People who live to 85 have a one-in-four chance of getting dementia.

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Dementia statistics set to triple for Tamworth

Dementia patient twice as likely to die from drugs, researchers warn

By Jenny Hope

Last updated at 9:44 AM on 24th February 2012

Elderly people in nursing homes with dementia run double the risk of dying from certain ‘chemical cosh’ drugs, warn researchers.

Alarm bells have been sounded about the dangers of premature death caused by antipsychotic drugs in recent years, but a new study shows some are more risky than others.

It found people over 65 taking haloperidol had double the risk of death compared with those taking a newer drug called risperidone.

A study has found that people over 65 taking haloperidol, pictured, had double the risk of death compared with those taking a newer drug called risperidone

Those taking highest doses of antipsychotic drugs - often known as the ‘chemical cosh’ because they are wrongly used to sedate elderly patients - were at greatest risk.

The Harvard Medical School study, the largest ever undertaken among US nursing home residents, looked at 75,445 older nursing home residents between 2001 and 2005.

The drugs investigated in the study are all used in nursing homes and on general hospital wards in the UK.

 

A Government-commissioned review in 2009 found 180,000 people with dementia were prescribed antipsychotics, of which 144,000 were given them inappropriately.

Research suggests this could mean 23,500 people dying prematurely each year.

Haloperidol, which was originally licensed for schizophrenia and other psychiatric conditions, is one of the oldest used, while newer antipsychotics include risperidone and quetiapine.

A Government-commissioned review in 2009 found 180,000 people with dementia were prescribed antipsychotics, of which 144,000 were given them inappropriately

In the six-month study published in bmj.com - the online edition of the British Medical Journal - researchers found 6,598 nursing home residents died, almost nine per cent.

Patients treated with haloperidol had double the risk of death compared with those taking risperidone, the most commonly prescribed drug which was used for comparison with the other five drugs.

The effect of haloperidol was strongest in the first 40 days of treatment, while those taking quetiapine (sold under the brand Seroquel) had a slightly reduced risk of death.

There was no significant effect on death rates from the other drugs, aripiprazole, olanzapine (marketed as Zyprexa) and ziprasidone.

Almost half of deaths were recorded as due to circulatory disorders, 10 per cent due to brain disorders and 15 per cent to respiratory disorders.

The experts concluded ‘The data suggest that the risk of mortality with these drugs is generally increased with higher doses and seems to be highest for haloperidol and least for quetiapine.’

The Daily Mail has long called for an improvement in the care of dementia sufferers as part of our Dignity for the Elderly Campaign.

Manchester University academics earlier this week found more than a quarter of elderly patients with dementia were receiving antipsychotics, sometimes for years even though they are supposed to be used for a few weeks at most.

Most antipsychotic drugs are not licensed for treatment of dementia but are frequently prescribed to control agitation and aggressive behaviour, making life easier for carers and nursing home staff.

But Dr Anne Corbett, research manager at the Alzheimer’s Society charity, said the practice must stop.

She said ‘This research supports existing studies that have shown antipsychotics can raise the risk of death, particularly when used over the longer term.

‘As many as 150,000 of the 180,000 people with dementia who are on the drugs in the UK have been prescribed inappropriately. For a minority of people with dementia antipsychotics should be used, but then only for up to twelve weeks, and under the correct circumstances.

‘People with dementia are currently having their lives put at risk because of dangerous antipsychotic medication. Too often we hear about an over-reliance on medication as a response to distressed reactions of people with dementia, when a person-centred approach is what is required.

‘This needs to stop now. There has been some progress but good care rather than antipsychotics must become the norm. Staff need to be trained and supported to be empowered to provide person-centred care.’

 

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Dementia patient twice as likely to die from drugs, researchers warn