- Title
- Addressing Dementia Through Analysis of Population Traits and Risk Factors (ADAPTOR) project: dementia incidence in an Australian cohort.
- Creator
- Nepal, Smriti; Dolja-Gore, Xenia; Cavenagh, Dominic; D'Este, Catherine; Anstey, Kaarin J.; Brodaty, Henry; Welberry, Heidi J.; Goh, Anita M. Y.; McNamara, Martin
- Relation
- Public Health Research & Practice Vol. 33, Issue 2, no. e3322317
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17061/phrp3322317
- Publisher
- Sax Institute
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2023
- Description
- Dementia is associated with a decline in cognition and daily function, presenting with related symptoms such as memory impairment and problems with speech, movement or mobility.1 It affects approximately 487 500 Australians and is predicted to affect >1.1 million by 2058.2 The annual care costs are estimated to increase from $9.1 billion in 2017 to A$24.1 billion by 2056.3 Currently, there is a lack of a single valid and reliable data source for dementia identification. Welberry et al. recently demonstrated the feasibility of linking large population-based cohorts to administrative datasets to identify dementia cases at different stages of their trajectory.4 The Addressing Dementia Through Analysis of Population Traits and Risk Factors (ADAPTOR) project links data from a large Australian cohort study (followed up for 15 years) to various administrative health datasets. While the project links the same cohort study (the Sax Institute’s 45 And Up Study) and administrative datasets for dementia identification, it expands on Welberry et al.’s study by extending the data cut-off period from June 2014 to June 2018; including additional datasets and participants aged between 45–54 years; and stratifying data by sex and age group. The ADAPTOR project estimates dementia incidence, investigates the association between risk factors and incidence, and models the impact of modifiable risk factor reduction (e.g. increased physical activity, reduced alcohol consumption) on population-level dementia incidence. This paper presents preliminary findings from the project on sex and age-specific incidence of dementia and presents the most common data sources for dementia identification.
- Subject
- dementia; cognition; daily function; memory impairment
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1487115
- Identifier
- uon:52050
- Identifier
- ISSN:2204-2091
- Language
- eng
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