Family abuse of people with dementia common: study

LONDON (Reuters) - People caring for family members with dementia commonly abuse them with behavior such as swearing and shouting, researchers said on Friday in a study that shows a more widespread problem than previously thought.

“The study shows abusive behavior is very common and not something doctors are regularly asking about and therefore finding,” Claudia Cooper, a researcher at University College London, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

A third of family caregivers said their abuse of the person they were looking after was significant, including frequent insulting or swearing, and half said they occasionally screamed or yelled at the person.

The researchers, who found few cases of physical abuse, say their study — published in the British Medical Journal — highlights the need for governments and health officials to widen efforts aimed at tackling elder abuse.

“This is the strongest evidence so far about the prevalence of abusive behavior from family carers of people with dementia,” said Cooper.

“These were the sons and daughters, and husbands and wives.”

An estimated 24 million people worldwide have the memory loss, problems with orientation and other symptoms that signal Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia — a number some researchers believe will quadruple by 2040.

With rising costs and under-pressure health care systems worldwide forcing many family members to provide their own care, the findings highlight the need to tackle abuse and register it is probably more widespread than thought, Cooper said.

The researchers surveyed 220 family caregivers of various socio-economic and ethnic backgrounds whose family members were recently referred to psychiatric services and living at home.

While acknowledging the strains of giving round-the-clock care and of watching a relative slip into a condition in which they no longer recognize a loved one, Cooper said, “All types of abuse can be distressing and harmful for an older person.”

(Reporting by Michael Kahn; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Source

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Although many doctors worry about breaking bad news about seriously ill patients to their kin, most family members want to know the truth, a study published Monday suggests. Research has shown that many doctors hesitate to be fully open with critically ill patients and their families — opting, for example, to

Full Post: Families want doctors to share bad news
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Joene Hendry NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Among respondents to a national survey on children with special healthcare needs, nearly 9 percent of caregivers indicated a need for respite care. However, about a quarter of these caregivers’ needs may go unmet, Dr. Savithri Nageswaran, of Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina found. “Respite

Full Post: Caregivers may lack help caring for disabled kids
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LONDON (Reuters) - Keeping a full social calendar may help protect you from dementia, researchers said on Monday. Socially active people who were not easily stressed had a 50 percent lower risk of developing dementia compared with men and women who were isolated and prone to distress, they reported in the journal Neurology. “In the past, studies

Full Post: Go to a party to cut dementia risk, study suggests
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Doctors are often reluctant to discuss a seriously ill patients’ uncertain prognosis with family members, but a new study suggests that most families want doctors to address the patients’ uncertain outlook openly and candidly. “The vast majority of families of critically ill patients want physicians to openly discuss the prognosis, even

Full Post: Most families want doctors to be candid
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More than half of people with a rare sleep disorder develop a neurodegenerative disease, such as Parkinson’s disease, within 12 years of being diagnosed, results of a Canadian study published Wednesday indicate. So-called “REM sleep behavior disorder” affects a small percentage of the population, Dr. Ronald B. Postuma, at McGill University

Full Post: Rare sleep disorder may be a harbinger of dementia

Site Navigation

Most Read

Search

Contact

  • kinwrite.com@gmail.com