Study
by Rush Alzheimer’s
Disease
Center
finds adult day care may help the transition
(CHICAGO)
– People with Alzheimer’s disease experience an
acceleration in the rate of cognitive decline
after being placed in a nursing home according
to a new study by the Rush Alzheimer’s
Disease
Center. The study,
published in the June issue of the American
Journal of Psychiatry, finds that prior
experience in adult day care may lessen this
association.
The observational study involved 432 older persons with Alzheimer’s
disease who were recruited from health care
settings in the
Chicago
area. At baseline, they lived in the community
and 196 participants were using day care
services from 2 to 6 days a week for an overall
mean of 1.7 days a week. At six month intervals
for up to four years, they completed nine
cognitive tests from which a composite measure
of global cognition was derived.
On average, cognition declined at a gradually increasing rate for all
participants. During the study period, 155
persons were placed in a nursing home, and
placement was associated with a lower level of
cognition and more rapid cognitive decline.
Study participants who had previous adult day care experience fared
better. As level of day care use at study
onset increased, the association of nursing home
placement with accelerated cognitive decline
substantially decreased. Thus, people using day
care 3 to 4 days a week at the beginning of the
study showed no increase in cognitive decline
upon nursing home placement.
“The findings suggest that experience in day care may help individuals
with Alzheimer’s disease make the transition
from the community to institutional residence,”
said study author Robert S. Wilson, Ph.D., a
neuropsychologist at the Rush Alzheimer’s
Disease
Center.
The study also found that a higher level of education was associated with
accelerated cognitive decline upon nursing home
placement.
Yet, day care use markedly reduced the association of education with
accelerated cognitive decline in the nursing
home; further evidence that there is a
robust association between day care
experience and cognition during the
transition to a nursing home.
The authors considered the possibility that nursing home placement is
simply a sign of increased severity of
Alzheimer’s disease. Yet, the
nursing-home-related increase in cognitive
decline was observed even after simultaneous
control for cognitive and noncognitive
indicators of dementia severity at the time of
nursing home entry.
Alternatively, the increased cognitive decline upon placement may reflect
difficulty adapting to an unfamiliar
environment, consistent with clinical reports of
increased confusion and behavior problems in
those with dementia during acute hospitalization
or trips away from home. Patients who had prior
adult day care services may have been better
able to adjust to the unfamiliar environment.
“The findings suggest that the transition from the community to a nursing
home is particularly difficult for people with
Alzheimer’s disease and that those planning for
their care should consider the possibility that
experience in adult day care programs may help
prepare affected persons for institutional
living,” said
Wilson.
The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes on
Aging, which leads the federal effort supporting
and conducting research on aging and the
medical, social and behavioral issues of older
people, including Alzheimer’s disease and
age-related cognitive decline.
The Rush Alzheimer's
Disease
Center is one of approximately
30 NIA-supported Alzheimer's Disease Centers
across the
U.S.
which conduct basic science, clinical, and
social and behavioral research on dementia and
AD. General information on aging and aging
research can be viewed at the NIA's home
website,
www.nia.nih.gov