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Those With Early Onset Dementia More Prone To Committing Suicide

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Day guest Helga during a sport lesson in the geriatric day care facility of the German Red Cross (DRK, or Deutsches Rotes Kreuz) at Villa Albrecht on March 18, 2013 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Carsten Koall/Getty Images)

People stricken by young onset dementia are up to seven times more likely to commit suicide, warns new research.

The study of more than 590,000 patients in England found an increased risk of suicide associated with dementia in patients diagnosed before the age of 65. Researchers also found a rise in the risk of suicide among people diagnosed with dementia in the previous three months.

In the UK, around 850,000 people are currently living with dementia, and it is the leading cause of death. Around 42,000 of those have young onset dementia. 

EMT Barbara Pople prepares to apply an adhesive bandage after administering a COVID-19 vaccination dose to Marilyn Lurie, who is homebound suffering from frontotemporal dementia, in the backyard of Lurie’s home on July 16, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
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It is estimated that only around two-thirds of those living with dementia have received a diagnosis, and improving access to a timely and accurate dementia diagnosis is a major National Health Servicoe (NHS) priority. However, the expansion of memory clinics for diagnosing dementia has not always been accompanied by additional resources for supporting patients in the difficult period after they are diagnosed.

Study’s senior author Dr. Charles Marshall, Clinical Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Neurologist at the Wolfson Institute of Population Health at Queen Mary, said: “Improving access to a dementia diagnosis is an important healthcare priority.

“However, a dementia diagnosis can be devastating, and our work shows that we also need to ensure that services have the resources to provide appropriate support after a diagnosis is given.”

Researchers from Queen Mary University of London and Nottingham University, undertook a study of medical records from 2001 to 2019 to determine if there was a link between dementia diagnosis and suicide risk. The team found that just under one in 50 patients diagnosed with dementia died by suicide.

The findings, published in JAMA Neurology, showed that patients were at a higher risk of suicide after a dementia diagnosis if aged under 65, during the first three months after a diagnosis, or if they had a known psychiatric illness.

Nurse Doret Kohl (L) responds to the excited talk of a day guest in the geriatric day care facility of the German Red Cross (DRK, or Deutsches Rotes Kreuz) at Villa Albrecht on March 18, 2013 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Carsten Koall/Getty Images)

Of 4,940 patients identified from primary and secondary care with a dementia diagnosis, 95 (1.92 percent) died by suicide. Compared with patients without a dementia diagnosis. 

Patients of any age within three months of receiving a dementia diagnosis had 2.47 times increased risk of suicide when compared to those without a dementia diagnosis. People with dementia who died by suicide had been diagnosed at a significantly younger average age (76.05) than patients with dementia who died from other causes (80.50).

The research team said that early recognition and a timely accurate diagnosis of dementia, combined with specialist support, are “hugely important” factors in reducing the distress caused by a young onset diagnosis.

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Lead author Dr. Danah Alothman, of the University of Nottingham, added: “These findings suggest that memory clinics should particularly target suicide risk assessment to patients with young-onset dementia, patients in the first few months after a dementia diagnosis and patients are already known to have psychiatric problems.”
 

Produced in association with SWNS Talker.

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