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J Neurol Sci
Published

New cases of dementia are rising in elderly populations in Wales, UK.

Authors

Joshua Stevenson-Hoare, Ann-Kathrin Schalkamp, Cynthia Sandor, John Hardy, Valentina Escott-Price

Abstract

Dementia is one of the most common diseases in elderly populations, and older populations are one of the fastest growing groups globally. Consequently, the number of people developing and living with dementia is likely to grow. Using longitudinal medical records from Wales, UK between 1999 and 2018, diagnoses of overall dementia and common subtypes were combined with demographic data to assess numbers of new and existing cases per year. Data extraction resulted in 161,186 diagnoses from 116,645 individuals. Mean age at diagnosis of dementia increased over this period, resulting in fewer younger people with the disease. New cases of dementia have risen, as has the number of people living with dementia. Individuals with dementia are also living longer, even accounting for their older age. This may present a challenge for healthcare systems as the number of elderly people living with dementia is expected to continue to grow.

PMID:37385025 | DOI:10.1016/j.jns.2023.120715

UK DRI Authors

Cynthia Sandor

Dr Cynthia Sandor

Group Leader

Developing new ways to detect and monitor Parkinson’s

Dr Cynthia Sandor
John Hardy

Prof Sir John Hardy

Group Leader

Harnessing genetics to build a better understanding of dementia

Prof Sir John Hardy
Valentina Escott-Price

Prof Valentina Escott-Price

Group Leader

Using Big Data, machine learning and AI to accelerate discoveries into dementia

Prof Valentina Escott-Price