The Prevalence of Missing Incidents and Their Antecedents Among Older Adult MedicAlert Subscribers: Retrospective Descriptive Study.

IF 5 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
JMIR Aging Pub Date : 2024-06-10 DOI:10.2196/58205
Antonio Miguel-Cruz, Hector Perez, Yoojin Choi, Emily Rutledge, Christine Daum, Lili Liu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: With the population aging, the number of people living with dementia is expected to rise, which, in turn, is expected to lead to an increase in the prevalence of missing incidents due to critical wandering. However, the estimated prevalence of missing incidents due to dementia is inconclusive in some jurisdictions and overlooked in others.

Objective: The aims of the study were to examine (1) the demographic, psychopathological, and environmental antecedents to missing incidents due to critical wandering among older adult MedicAlert Foundation Canada (hereinafter MedicAlert) subscribers; and (2) the characteristics and outcomes of the missing incidents.

Methods: This study used a retrospective descriptive design. The sample included 434 older adult MedicAlert subscribers involved in 560 missing incidents between January 2015 and July 2021.

Results: The sample was overrepresented by White older adults (329/425, 77.4%). MedicAlert subscribers reported missing were mostly female older adults (230/431, 53.4%), living in urban areas with at least 1 family member (277/433, 63.8%). Most of the MedicAlert subscribers (345/434, 79.5%) self-reported living with dementia. MedicAlert subscribers went missing most frequently from their private homes in the community (96/143, 67.1%), traveling on foot (248/270, 91.9%) and public transport (12/270, 4.4%), during the afternoon (262/560, 46.8%) and evening (174/560, 31.1%). Most were located by first responders (232/486, 47.7%) or Good Samaritans (224/486, 46.1%). Of the 560 missing incidents, 126 (22.5%) were repeated missing incidents. The mean time between missing incidents was 11 (SD 10.8) months. Finally, the majority of MedicAlert subscribers were returned home safely (453/500, 90.6%); and reports of harm, injuries (46/500, 9.2%), and death (1/500, 0.2%) were very low.

Conclusions: This study provides the prevalence of missing incidents from 1 database source. The low frequency of missing incidents may not represent populations that are not White. Despite the low number of missing incidents, the 0.2% (1/500) of cases resulting in injuries or death are devastating experiences that may be mitigated through prevention strategies.

老年人 MedicAlert 用户中失踪事件的发生率及其前因:回顾性描述研究
背景:随着人口老龄化的加剧,痴呆症患者的数量预计会增加,这反过来又会导致因严重走失而造成的失踪事件的发生率上升。然而,在一些司法管辖区,对痴呆症导致的失踪事件发生率的估计尚无定论,而在另一些司法管辖区则被忽视了:本研究的目的是:研究(1)加拿大老年医疗警报基金会(以下简称 MedicAlert)用户中因严重走失而导致失踪事件的人口、心理病理学和环境因素;以及(2)失踪事件的特征和结果:本研究采用回顾性描述设计。样本包括 2015 年 1 月至 2021 年 7 月间 560 起失踪事件中涉及的 434 名老年 MedicAlert 用户:样本中白人老年人占多数(329/425,77.4%)。报告失踪的 MedicAlert 用户大多为女性老年人(230/431,53.4%),居住在城市地区,至少有一名家庭成员(277/433,63.8%)。大多数 MedicAlert 用户(345/434,79.5%)自称患有痴呆症。MedicAlert 用户最常在下午(262/560,46.8%)和晚上(174/560,31.1%)从社区的私人住宅(96/143,67.1%)、步行(248/270,91.9%)和公共交通工具(12/270,4.4%)失踪。大多数失踪者是由急救人员(232/486,47.7%)或好心人(224/486,46.1%)找到的。在 560 起失踪事件中,有 126 起(22.5%)是重复失踪事件。失踪事件的平均间隔时间为 11 个月(标准差 10.8 个月)。最后,大多数 MedicAlert 用户都安全返回了家(453/500,90.6%);关于伤害、受伤(46/500,9.2%)和死亡(1/500,0.2%)的报告非常少:本研究从一个数据库来源提供了缺失事件的发生率。失踪事件发生率低可能并不代表非白人群体。尽管失踪事件的数量较少,但 0.2%(1/500)的案件造成了伤害或死亡,这些都是毁灭性的经历,可以通过预防策略加以缓解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JMIR Aging
JMIR Aging Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.10%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
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