| Literature DB >> 31683665 |
Dan Liu1,2, Guirong Cheng3,4, Lina An5, Xuguang Gan6, Yulian Wu7, Bo Zhang8, Sheng Hu9, Yan Zeng10,11, Liang Wu12,13.
Abstract
Dementia is a serious public health problem. The more extensive dementia knowledge is, the more conducive it is to early prevention and treatment of dementia. However, no assessment of the general population's dementia awareness has been conducted so far in China. Thus, this study assessed the national public knowledge of dementia based on mobile internet in China. We assessed 10,562 national respondents recruited based on the most popular social networking service in China, WeChat and analyzed the data using quantitative methods. The overall correct rate of total dementia knowledge was 63.14%. Only half of the participants (50.84%) could identify risk factors accurately. The level of dementia knowledge was positively associated with high education, city residency, and experience of exposure to information on dementia. The sandwich generation (aged 20-60 years) had the highest level of dementia knowledge. Chinese people were found to have a low level of knowledge about dementia, especially those aged over 60 years, with low education and living in rural areas. Further educational programs and campaigns are needed to improve dementia knowledge, with greater focus on the older population as the target audience, emphasis on dementia risk factors as educational content, correcting misconceptions about dementia, and providing more experience of exposure to dementia.Entities:
Keywords: WeChat; dementia; knowledge; risk factors
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31683665 PMCID: PMC6862030 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16214231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Sociodemographic characteristics (N = 9800). AD: Alzheimer’s disease.
| Characteristics | Participant Number (N) | Percentage (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Male | 4700 | 48.00 |
| Female | 5100 | 52.00 | |
| Age (years) | 18–20 | 3940 | 40.20 |
| 21–40 | 2480 | 25.31 | |
| 41–60 | 2056 | 20.98 | |
| 60~ | 1324 | 13.51 | |
| Education level (years) | 0–6 | 1040 | 10.61 |
| 7–9 | 1444 | 14.73 | |
| 10–12 | 2012 | 20.53 | |
| ≥13 | 5304 | 54.12 | |
| Resident | Rural | 4704 | 48.00 |
| City | 5096 | 52.00 | |
| Experience of exposure to dementia | |||
| Heard of dementia/dementia patients | Yes | 9277 | 94.66 |
| No | 5,23 | 5.34 | |
| Contact with AD patients | Yes | 4156 | 42.41 |
| No | 5644 | 57.59 |
The percentage of correct answers for questions regarding the knowledge about dementia. T: true, F: false.
| Modified Dementia Knowledge Scale (Correct Answer) | Category | Percent Correct (%) | Average Correct Rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| total | 63.14 | ||
| Many people with AD have trouble in handling money or paying bills. (T) | Symptoms | 56.06 | 62.64 |
| Some people with AD may become lost even in a familiar environment. (T) | 78.98 | ||
| Most people with AD remember recent events better than things that happened in the past. (T) | 90.58 | ||
| Most people with AD cannot name persons or things familiar to them. (T) | 79.66 | ||
| Many people with AD may be at a loss when they are in trouble. (T) | 53.35 | ||
| Some people with AD may wear more clothes in summer and less in winter. (T) | 41.31 | ||
| Some people with AD do not care about surrounding things. (T) | 47.16 | ||
| Some people with AD are more willing to sit at home, not go out, and not communicate with others. (T) | 54.07 | ||
| If someone’s biological parents have Alzheimer’s disease, this person is more likely to get Alzheimer’s disease too. (T) | Risk factors | 54.53 | 50.84 |
| The chance of developing dementia will increase as you get older. (T) | 79.09 | ||
| Having high blood pressure may increase a person’s risk of developing AD. (T) | 42.06 | ||
| Having high cholesterol may increase a person’s risk of developing AD. (T) | 28.67 | ||
| Diabetes may increase a person’s risk of developing AD. (T) | 29.85 | ||
| Brain trauma may not increase your chances of suffering from AD. (F) | 66.18 | ||
| Stroke or brain surgery have no effect on the chances of developing AD. (F) | 64.31 | ||
| Chronic systemic diseases do not increase the chances of developing AD. (F) | 42.04 | ||
| A person’s work or study may get affected when a family member is experiencing AD. (T) | Life impact | 72.60 | 66.97 |
| The likelihood of family members getting other diseases will increase when some people get AD. (T) | 40.90 | ||
| A person could experience a significant financial burden when a family member gets dementia. (T) | 68.12 | ||
| The families’ psychological burden and the occurrence of psychological illness may increase when a person is diagnosed with AD.(T) | 86.29 | ||
| Alzheimer’s disease cannot be cured. (T) | Treatment and management | 56.42 | 71.99 |
| It is impossible to prevent a person from developing AD. (F) | 87.57 | ||
| Maintaining a healthy lifestyle may reduce the risk of developing AD (T) | Protective factors | 81.33 | 77.01 |
| Physical exercises are generally beneficial for people experiencing AD. (T) | 86.26 | ||
| Intellectual activities such as reading books or newspaper and playing chess or card games are helpful for people with AD. (T) | 76.68 | ||
| Active participation in various social activities may protect the cognitive function of AD patients. (T) | 83.16 | ||
| Living with family may help someone with AD to preserve their cognition. (T) | 57.63 |
Relationship between socio-demographic characteristics, experience of exposure to dementia, and knowledge about dementia.
| Total Score (out of 27) | Z (or H) | Z# | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total score | 17.00 (14, 20) | |||||
| Sex | Male | 16.00 (14, 20) | −6.31 | <0.001 * | ||
| Female | 17.00 (14, 20) | |||||
| Age (years) | 18–20 | 16.00 (14, 19) | 410.77 | <0.001 * | ||
| 21–40 | 18.00 (15, 21) | −14.34 | <0.001 * | |||
| 41–60 | 18.00 (15, 21) | −15.62 | <0.001 * | |||
| 60~ | 15.00 (13, 19) | 1.72 | 0.513 | |||
| Education level (years) | 0–6 | 15.00 (12, 19) | 95.55 | <0.001 * | ||
| 7–9 | 17.00 (13, 20) | −4.83 | <0.001 * | |||
| 10–12 | 17.00 (14, 21) | −9.39 | <0.001 * | |||
| ≥13 | 17.00 (14, 20) | −8.03 | <0.001 * | |||
| Resident | Rural | 16.00 (13, 20) | −10.24 | <0.001 * | ||
| City | 17.00 (14, 20) | |||||
| Experience of exposure to dementia | ||||||
| Heard of dementia | Yes | 17.00 (14, 20) | −12.55 | <0.001 * | ||
| No | 14.00 (12, 18) | |||||
| Contact with AD patients | Yes | 17.00 (14, 21) | −9.18 | <0.001 * | ||
| No | 16.00 (14, 19) |
# represents the Z value of each subgroup compared with the first group; p1 means the first subgroup is the control.