We sought to understand the trajectory of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) better by examining longitudinally different MCI subtypes and progression to dementia and reversion to normal cognition in a ...community sample.
We evaluated the stability of MCI subtypes and risk of dementia over 4 biennial assessments as part of an ongoing prospective cohort study, the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study.
While prevalence of MCI and different MCI subtypes remains relatively stable across all assessments, reversion from MCI and transitions between different MCI subtypes were common. Up to 46.5% of participants classified with MCI at baseline reverted at some point during follow-up. The majority (83.8%) of participants with incident dementia were diagnosed with MCI 2 years prior to their dementia diagnosis. Both reverters and participants with stable MCI were at an increased risk of progression to dementia compared to those without MCI at baseline (HR 6.4,
= 0.02, and HR 24.7,
< 0.001, respectively); however, the risk of dementia in participants with MCI who did not revert was higher than in reverters (HR 2.5,
= 0.01). This effect was specific to amnestic subtypes (MCI reverters vs nonreverters: amnestic MCI HR 3.3,
= 0.006; nonamnestic MCI: HR 1.3,
= 0.67).
Our findings indicate that the relevance of reversion for progression risk depends on the MCI subtype. Subtype specificity and longitudinal characterization are required for the reliable identification of individuals at high risk of developing dementia.
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is considered an intermediate stage between normal aging and dementia. It is diagnosed in the presence of subjective cognitive decline and objective cognitive ...impairment without significant functional impairment, although there are no standard operationalizations for each of these criteria. The objective of this study is to determine which operationalization of the MCI criteria is most accurate at predicting dementia.
Six-year longitudinal study, part of the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study.
Community-based.
873 community-dwelling dementia-free adults between 70 and 90 years of age. Persons from a non-English speaking background were excluded.
Seven different operationalizations for subjective cognitive decline and eight measures of objective cognitive impairment (resulting in 56 different MCI operational algorithms) were applied. The accuracy of each algorithm to predict progression to dementia over 6 years was examined for 618 individuals.
Baseline MCI prevalence varied between 0.4% and 30.2% and dementia conversion between 15.9% and 61.9% across different algorithms. The predictive accuracy for progression to dementia was poor. The highest accuracy was achieved based on objective cognitive impairment alone. Inclusion of subjective cognitive decline or mild functional impairment did not improve dementia prediction accuracy.
Not MCI, but objective cognitive impairment alone, is the best predictor for progression to dementia in a community sample. Nevertheless, clinical assessment procedures need to be refined to improve the identification of pre-dementia individuals.
The loss of plant productivity with declining diversity is well established, exceeding other global change drivers including drought. These patterns are most clearly established for aboveground ...productivity, it remains poorly understood whether productivity increases associated with diversity are replicated belowground. To address this gap, we established a plant diversity-manipulation experiment in 2018. It is a full factorial manipulation of plant species richness and community composition, and precipitation. Three and five years post-establishment, two bulk soil cores (20cm depth) were collected and composited from each plot and were processed for roots to determine belowground biomass as root standing crop. We observed a strong positive relationship between richness and aboveground production and belowground biomass, generating positive combined above and belowground with diversity. Root standing crop increased 1.4-fold from years three to five. Grass communities produced more root biomass (monoculture mean 463.9 ± 410.3g m
−2
), and the magnitude of the relationship between richness and root standing crop was greatest within those communities. Legume communities produced the fewest roots (monoculture mean 212.2 ± 155.1g m
−2
), and belowground standing crop was not affected by diversity. Root standing crops in year three were 1.8 times higher under low precipitation conditions, while in year five we observed comparable root standing crops between precipitation treatments. Plant family was a strong mediator of increased belowground biomass observed with diversity, with single family grass and aster families generating 1.7 times greater root standing crops in six compared to single species communities, relationships between diversity and aboveground production were consistently observed in both single-family and multiple family communities. Diverse communities with species from multiple families generated only 1.3 times the root standing crop compared to monoculture average root biomass. We surprisingly observe diverse single family communities can generate increases in root standing crops that exceed those generated by diverse multiple family communities, highlighting the importance of plant richness within plant family for a given community. These patterns have potential implications for understanding the interactions of multiple global change drivers as changes in both precipitation and plant community composition do alter whether plant production aboveground is translated belowground biomass.
The Mediterranean diet is associated with multiple health benefits. Yet, no tool has been specifically developed to assess adherence to the 'traditional' Mediterranean diet and cuisine within a ...Western cohort, and validated for online use. We tested the reliability and validity of online administration of the Mediterranean Diet and Culinary Index (MediCul) among middle-aged and older adults. Participants were recruited in January⁻March 2017 from the 45 and Up Study, completing MediCul twice. Test-retest reliability was assessed using the paired
-test, intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and Bland-Altman plot. Validity was tested against a three-day food record (FR)-derived MediCul score using Bland-Altman and nutrient trends across the MediCul score tertiles. Participants (
= 84; 60% female; 65.4 years (SD = 5.9)), were overweight (BMI 26.1; SD = 4.0) with 1.7 (SD = 1.5) chronic illnesses/conditions. Sequential MediCul tool scores were 56.1/100.0 and 56.8/100.0, respectively (
= -1.019;
= 0.311). Reliability via ICC (ICC = 0.86, 95% CI: 0.789, 0.910,
< 0.0001) and Bland-Altman was good. In Bland-Altman validity analyses, the tool over-reported FR MediCul score by 5.6 points with no systematic bias ((y = 8.7 - 0.06*x) (95% CI: -0.278, 0.158,
= 0.584)). Nutrient trends were identified for MediCul consistent with expected Mediterranean patterns. Online MediCul administration demonstrated good reliability and moderate validity for assessing adherence to a 'traditional' Mediterranean pattern among older Australians.
ABSTRACTBackground:Caring for persons with dementia is stressful for family caregivers. Caregiver training programs and respite care can reduce this stress and help maintain persons with dementia ...living longer in the community. We evaluated a program that combines caregiver training with a residential respite stay.
In total, 90 dyads of persons with dementia and their caregivers, in groups of 3-6 dyads, volunteered to participate in a five-day residential training program and were followed-up 6 and 12 months later. The primary outcome was caregiver depression; secondary outcomes were measures of caregiver burden, unmet needs, person with dementia behavioral symptoms, and the quality of life and function.
Caregiver depression and burden were unchanged, despite decreasing function in persons with dementia. Caregivers' unmet needs and behavioral symptoms in persons with dementia decreased significantly. Compared to a group of persons with dementia admitted for routine residential respite care, there was a marked reduction in permanent placement over 12 months.
The Going to Stay at Home Program is a feasible and practicable model with benefits for caregivers and persons with dementia. It may lead to delay in institutionalization and may be applicable to other chronic conditions.
Background
Dementia prevalence is increasing, and risk reduction is a priority. Online interventions that are useable and acceptable to people seeking to reduce their dementia risk are needed. We ...aimed to assess and explore end‐user perceptions of a large‐scale multidomain online intervention targeting modifiable lifestyle risk factors for dementia.
Method
Mixed methods evaluation involving Maintain Your Brain (MYB) randomised controlled trial participants 55‐77 years of age at baseline who engaged in assessments, brain training, nutrition and physical activity, and mental health modules across three years. Of 5,260 participants invited, 2,386 completed online surveys at trial conclusion of whom 1,589 offered free‐text comments. Of survey respondents, 248 agreed to be contacted for interviews, 70 were invited and 40 were interviewed. Survey respondents rated ease of use and overall experience with MYB, endorsed whether they would recommend MYB, and provided comments. Interview completers further rated satisfaction with support, expressed online or face‐to‐face setting preference, answered open‐ended questions about participation, activities and modules, and provided further comments. Data were summarised using descriptive statistics and explored using multiple qualitative methods.
Result
Respondents found computer‐based activities easy to use (92.2%), were satisfied with their overall experience (87.4%) and would recommend MYB (82.7%). Survey free‐text and interview comments addressed topics including computer literacy, health literacy, resource access, motivations, expectations, social relationships, and significant events. Perspectives on activities and information varied. Many enjoyed and/or appreciated the challenge of completing activities and assessments and the potential for health benefits from these activities. Others were disappointed by their own performance in activities and assessments, found testing and reporting repetitious, stressful and/or time‐consuming, and found educational information unhelpful. Many respondents would have preferred to access applications on phones or tablet devices and suggested that interventions should be available across platforms. Respondents wanted researchers to know that flexible and adaptive individually tailored goals and activities and timely feedback are important.
Conclusion
The MYB online multidomain dementia risk reduction program was useable and acceptable. Similar programs should be accessible, well‐supported, cross‐IT platforms, and incorporate adaptive, individually tailored activities and feedback that is responsive to the varied and changing needs of older adults.
Objectives. To investigate differences in funding and service delivery between rural and urban local health departments (LHDs) in the United States.
Methods. In this repeated cross-sectional study, ...we examined rural–urban differences in funding and service provision among LHDs over time using 2010 and 2016 National Association of County and City Health Officials data.
Results. Local revenue among urban LHDs (41.2%) was higher than that in large rural (31.3%) and small rural LHDs (31.2%; P < .05). Small (20.9%) and large rural LHDs (19.8%) reported greater reliance on revenue from Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services than urban LHDs (11.5%; P < .05). All experienced decreases in clinical revenue between 2010 and 2016. Urban LHDs provided less primary care services in 2016; rural LHDs provided more mental health and substance abuse services (P < .05).
Conclusions. Urban LHDs generated more revenues from local sources, and rural LHDs generated more from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services and clinical services. Rural LHDs tended to provide more clinical services. Given rural LHDs’ reliance on clinical revenue, decreases in clinical services could have disproportionate effects on them.
Public Health Implications. Differences in financing and service delivery by rurality have an impact on the communities. Rural LHDs rely more heavily on state and federal dollars, which are vulnerable to changes in state and national health policy.
First is the shape of the lyrics themselves, which in Benson's edition are in surprising tension with the sonnet form, treating many individual sonnets as subordinate stanzas within longer poems. ......I suggest that at the same time as Benson was responding to the 1609 collection, the formal variety of these "sweetely composed Poems" also reflected a metaphysical poetics of desire recently made available in other mid-century collections, particularly the 1633 and 1635 publications of John Donne's Poems.