Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Incidence and prevalence of dementia in linked administrative health data in Saskatchewan, Canada : a retrospective cohort study

Kosteniuk, JG; Morgan, DG; O’Connell, ME; Kirk, A; Crossley, M; Teare, GF; Stewart, NJ; Bello-Haas, VD; Forbes, DA; Innes, A; Quail, JM

Incidence and prevalence of dementia in linked administrative health data in Saskatchewan, Canada : a retrospective cohort study Thumbnail


Authors

JG Kosteniuk

DG Morgan

ME O’Connell

A Kirk

M Crossley

GF Teare

NJ Stewart

VD Bello-Haas

DA Forbes

A Innes

JM Quail



Abstract

Background:
Determining the epidemiology of dementia among the population as a whole in specific jurisdictions – including the long-term care population–is essential to providing appropriate care. The objectives of this study were to use linked administrative databases in the province of Saskatchewan to determine the 12-month incidence and prevalence of dementia for the 2012/13 period (1) among individuals aged 45 and older in the province of Saskatchewan, (2) according to age group and sex, and (3) according to diagnosis code and other case definition criteria.
Methods:
We used a population-based retrospective cohort study design and extracted data from 10 provincial health databases linked by a unique health services number. The cohort included individuals 45 years and older at first identification of dementia between April 1, 2001 and March 31, 2013 based on case definitions met within any one of four administrative health databases (Hospital Discharge Abstracts, Physician Service Claims, Prescription Drug, and RAI-MDS, i.e., Long-term Care).
Results:
A total of 3,270 incident cases of dementia (7.28 per 1,000 PAR) and 13,012 prevalent cases (28.16 per 1,000 PAR) were identified during 2012/13. This study found the incidence rate increased by 2.8 to 5.1 times and the prevalence rate increased by 2.6 to 4.6 times every 10 years after 45 years of age. Overall, the age-standardised incidence rate was significantly lower among females than males (7.04 vs. 7.65 per 1,000 PAR) and the age-standardised prevalence rate was significantly higher among females than males (28.92 vs. 26.53 per 1,000 PAR). Over one-quarter (28 %) of all incident cases were admitted to long-term care before a diagnosis was formally recorded in physician or hospital data, and nearly two-thirds of these cases were identified at admission with impairment at the moderate to very severe level or a disease category of Alzheimer’s disease/other dementia.
Conclusions:
Linking multiple sources of registry data contributes to our understanding of the epidemiology of dementia across multiple segments of the population, inclusive of individuals residing in long-term care. This information is foundational for public awareness and policy recommendations, health promotion and prevention strategies, appropriate health resource planning, and research priorities.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 16, 2015
Online Publication Date Jul 3, 2015
Publication Date Jul 3, 2015
Deposit Date Jun 28, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jun 28, 2017
Journal BMC Geriatrics
Electronic ISSN 1471-2318
Publisher Springer Verlag
Volume 15
Issue 1
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-015-0075-3
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-015-0075-3
Related Public URLs http://bmcgeriatr.biomedcentral.com/
Additional Information Funders : CIHR
Projects : incidence and prevalence of dementia in saskatchewan

Files





Downloadable Citations