Receipt of help by people with cognitive impairment: results from the English longitudinal study of ageing

Read, S.ORCID logo, Hu, B.ORCID logo, Dixon, J.ORCID logo, Brimblecombe, N.ORCID logo, Wittenberg, R.ORCID logo, Brayne, C. & Banerjee, S. (2023). Receipt of help by people with cognitive impairment: results from the English longitudinal study of ageing. Aging and Mental Health, 27(2), 272 - 280. https://doi.org/10.1080/13607863.2021.2017846
Copy

Objectives: We investigated whether people with dementia or low memory/orientation reported more help misaligned with needs–more unmet need and/or more unrequired help–than other people with similar levels of functional limitation, and examined associations with quality of life. Methods: From pooled English Longitudinal Study of Ageing data from waves 6, 7, and 8, we identified community-dwelling people aged 50+ with: dementia (n= 405); low memory/orientation but no dementia (n= 4520); and intact memory/orientation (n= 10,264). Unmet need (not receiving help for the functional limitation) and unrequired help (receipt of help without the respective functional limitation) were used as outcomes in two-part regressions. Quality of life (CASP-19) was used as a continuous outcome in a linear regression. Functional limitation and its interaction with cognitive status and socio-demographic factors were included in the models. Results: Those with dementia or low memory/orientation but few functional limitations reported more unmet needs and unrequired help than their counterparts with intact memory/orientation. At high levels of limitations, the needs of those with dementia or lower memory/orientation were met more often and the receipt of unrequired help was similar compared to those with intact memory/orientation. Unmet need and unrequired help were associated with poorer quality of life. Conclusions: Unmet need and unrequired help were particular challenges for those with poorer cognition and potentially at early stages of dementia; they were associated with lower quality of life. Our results highlight the importance of good-quality timely diagnosis, identification of needs, and person-centred assessment to help improve quality of life.

picture_as_pdf

subject
Published Version
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Download

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export