| Literature DB >> 35886711 |
SangA Lee1, Deogwoon Kim1, Haeok Lee1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delayed detection and diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease and related dementia (ADRD) can lead to suboptimal care and socioeconomic burdens on individuals, families, and communities. Our objective is to investigate dementia screening behavior focusing on minority older populations and assess whether there are ethnic differences in ADRD screening behavior.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; dementia; ethnicity; health disparities; older adults; race; screening
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35886711 PMCID: PMC9321249 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19148865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Study Flowgram.
Study characteristics and findings.
| References | Study Location/ | Design/Population/ | Ethnicity/Race/ | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clark | U.S. | Cohort study | African Americans | Time from noticing first AD signs to recognition No difference urban vs. suburban No difference urban vs. suburban |
| Holsinger | U.S. | Cross-sectional study | White vs. minority | Majority accepted screening |
| Fowler | U.S. | Cross-sectional study | White 41.5%, African Americans 56.5% | Majority willing to screen; 12.7% screened positive |
| Fowler | U.S. | Cross-sectional study | Site 1 ( | Site 1: |
| Savva | U.S. | Cross-sectional study | White 73%, Non-White 27% | 121 informants reported prior diagnosis |
| Casado | U.S. | Cross-sectional survey | Korean Americans | 20.7% reported having experience with caring for someone with AD. |
| Amjad | U.S. | Cross-sectional observational study | Non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic or other non-Hispanic (Asian, Pacific Islander, and Native American) | 39.5% undiagnosed |
| Harrawood | U.S. | Cross-sectional study | African American 42.4% ( | 21.6% refused screening |
| Gianattasio | U.S. | Longitudinal study | Non-Hispanic White: 91–93%, Non-Hispanic Black: 7–9% | Whites were “correctly diagnosed” |
| Park | U.S. | Cross-sectional study | White 82.7%, Black/African American 11.6%, Hispanic 1.2%, Asian 0.6%, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander 0.3%, American Indian 0.8% | In terms of demographic difference, female and participants with long-term care insurance have greater intention to screen but no mention about the effect of race. |
| Lin | U.S. | Prospective cohort study | Non-Hispanic White 80.8%, non-Hispanic Black 11.9%, Hispanic 7.3% | A higher proportion of Blacks and Hispanics had a missed/delayed clinical dementia diagnosis compared with White (46%, s = 54% vs. 41%) Estimated mean delay: |
| Tsoy | U.S. | Retrospective cross-sectional study | White 74.6%, Black 3.9%, Hispanic 12.0%, Asian 9.5% | Incident MCI diagnosis |
| Wiese | U.S. | Mixed methods | Non-Hispanic White ( | 81%: willing to screening annually if they developed memory problems or AD |
| Wiese | U.S. | Mixed methods | White ( | 100%: willing to screening |
| Williams | U.S. | Mixed method | African American ( | More African Americans recruited from churches than Hispanic and European American |
| Hinton | U.S. | Qualitative Study | African American ( | Help-seeking was most often initiated by family members or formal care providers |
| Hugh | U.S. | Qualitative study | African American | Not knowledgeable about AD prior to their family diagnosed |
| Leung | Canada | Qualitative study | Anglo-Canadian | Symptom recognition to a dementia diagnosis 2–4 years |
| Koehn | Canada | Qualitative study | Chinese Canadian | The average pre-diagnosis interval: 1.5 years |
| McCleary et al. (2012) | Canada | Descriptive qualitative study | South Asian-Canadian | Early signs of dementia were seen as normal that are related to the aging process or patients’ personality characteristics. |
| Garcia | Canada | Qualitative study | French-speaking Canadian | Estimated first suspicion of a problem to an official diagnosis: 1–7 years |
Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer’s disease; ADAMS, Aging, Demographics and Memory Study; HRS, Health and Retirement Study; CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; PCP, primary care provider; NHATS, National Health and Aging Trends Study; OR, odds ratio; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; CMS, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid.
Definitions and Measures of ADRD Screening Behavior.
| Dimensions | Definitions | Findings: Empirical Statements | Measures/ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Noticing symptoms | Noticing first signs and symptoms | “I heard the word, but I did not pay much attention to it” Usually normalized or attribute to other health problems. | “The first ADRD symptoms were observed” |
| Recognizing a problem | Recognize the signs and symptoms as problems | Multiples signs and symptoms, more cognitive and behavior changes, symptoms getting worse and increasing loss of ability. | “Caregiver’s recognition that a problem existed” |
| Accepting Screen | Acknowledging that there is a problem that needs to change | Accumulation of subtle changes including issues with hygiene, finance, or safety in combination with forgetfulness; Consider harm and benefit of screening. | Modified SAPH * |
| Intending Screen | Intention or willingness undergo screen | “No critical event either physical or cognitive symptoms to trigger their desire to seek care” | “Plan to screen for AD at some point in life” |
| Action | Taking actions to assess the symptoms | Diagnosis process was multiple visits and interactions with health professionals. | Ever participated in screen procedures |
| Integrating with time | Timeliness of receiving a clinical diagnosis; Delays in diagnosis of ADRD | Delays due to not only the trajectory of the disease and patients’ personality but also to the types of caregivers. | “The first observed ADRD symptoms to first physician visit” |
Abbreviations: ADRD, Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias; SAPH, Dementia Screening and Perceived Harms Questionnaire; PRISM-PC, Perceptions Regarding Investigational Screening for Memory in Primary Care; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; CSI-D, Community Screening Instrument for Dementia; TICS, Telephone Instrument for Cognitive Screening. * SAPH has become the PRISM-PC (Acceptance subscale: 2 dimensions, 6 items).
ADRD screening behaviors by race/ethnicity.
| Non-Hispanic Black vs. White | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subgroups | Findings | |||
| Reference | Outcome | Value | Reference Group | |
| Non-Hispanic Black | Fowler et al. (2015) | Accepted screening | ||
| Urban hospital | 60.3% | 63.1% | ||
| Network of urban and suburban hospitals and outpatient care centers | 66.3% | 63.6% | ||
| Folwer et al. (2012) | Undergo screening | 89.5% | 90.4% | |
| Harrawood | Screened positive for dementia | 11.7% | 9% † | |
| Lin et al., (2021) | Dementia diagnosis without delay | 54.5% | 59.3% | |
| Missed or delayed dementia diagnosis | 45.5% | 40.8% | ||
| Amjad et al. | Undiagnosed vs. diagnosed dementia | Adjusted OR 1.26 ‡ | - | |
| Unaware vs. aware of dementia diagnosis | Adjusted OR 0.73 ‡ | |||
| Gianattasio | Underdiagnosed | Adjusted PR 1.35–2.33 | - | |
| Hinton et al. (2004) | Lack of a final diagnosis | 20% | 7% | |
| Latino/Hispanic vs. White | ||||
| Subgroups | Findings | |||
| Reference | Outcome | Value | Reference group (Non-Hispanic White) | |
| Hispanic | Lin et al. | Dementia diagnosis without delay | 45.8% | 59.3% |
| Missed or delayed dementia diagnosis | 54.2% | 40.8% | ||
| Amjad et al. | Undiagnosed vs. diagnosed dementia | Adjusted OR 2.48 | - | |
| Unaware vs. aware of dementia diagnosis | Adjusted OR 0.87 ‡ | - | ||
| Asian vs. White | ||||
| Subgroup | Findings | |||
| Reference | Outcome | Value | Reference group (Non-Hispanic White) | |
| Chinese | Hinton et al. (2004) | Lack of a final diagnosis | 43% | 7% |
| Other vs. White | ||||
| Subgroup | Findings | |||
| Reference | Outcome | Value | Reference group (Non-Hispanic White) | |
| Other | Fowler et al. (2015) | Accepted screening | ||
| Urban hospital | 33.3% | 63.1% | ||
| Network of urban and suburban hospitals and outpatient care centers | 100% | 63.6% | ||
| Fowler et al. (2012) | Undergo screening | 87.5% | 90.4% | |
| Non-White | Savva | Prior diagnosis of dementia (weighted) | 48% | 41.1% |
† “Other” racial groups are also included in the reference group. ‡ No statistical significance. Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio; PR, prevalence ratio.