自我伤害的痴呆症患者的死亡率:澳大利亚数据链接研究

Adrian R Walker, Preeyaporn Srasuebkul, Julian N Trollor, Anne PF Wand, Brian Draper, Rachael C Cvejic, Annette Moxey, Simone Reppermund
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摘要

方法:我们在澳大利亚新南威尔士州开展了一项回顾性队列研究,使用了 2001 年至 2015 年的数据。从研究期间接受医院服务的患者中,我们发现了154811名痴呆症/轻度认知障碍患者、28972名自残者和1511名既有痴呆症/轻度认知障碍记录又有自残记录的患者。我们使用灵活的参数生存分析法研究了痴呆症/轻度认知障碍和/或自残患者的死亡率、死亡原因和死亡预测因素。结果:在有自我伤害行为的痴呆症患者中,32.0%的人死于循环系统疾病,其次是肿瘤(14.7%)以及精神和行为障碍(9.6%)。如果自残者出现痴呆/轻度认知障碍,则更有可能死亡。死亡的预测因素包括:男性、身体合并症较多、有谵妄病史、曾在急诊科就诊次数较多以及曾接受过精神健康门诊服务天数较少。讨论:我们发现,当自我伤害者患上痴呆症时,死亡率会上升。我们认为,诊断后支持为降低痴呆症患者和自我伤害患者的死亡率提供了潜在的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mortality in people living with dementia who self-harmed: An Australian data linkage study
Objectives:This study aimed to examine mortality for people living with dementia/mild cognitive impairment who self-harmed.Methods:We conducted a retrospective cohort study in New South Wales, Australia, using data ranging from 2001 to 2015. From people who accessed hospital services in the study period, we identified 154,811 people living with dementia/mild cognitive impairment, 28,972 who self-harmed and 1511 who had a record of both dementia/mild cognitive impairment and self-harm. We examined rates, causes and predictors of death for people with dementia/mild cognitive impairment and/or self-harm diagnoses using flexible parametric survival analyses. We explored rates of repeat self-harm in people living with dementia who self-harmed.Results:Circulatory disorders accounted for 32.0% of deaths in people with a living with dementia who self-harmed, followed by neoplasms (14.7%), and mental and behavioural disorders (9.6%). Death was more likely for someone who had self-harmed if they developed dementia/mild cognitive impairment. Predictors of death included male sex, greater physical comorbidity, a history of delirium, more previous emergency department presentations and fewer previous mental health ambulatory service days. Greater engagement with outpatient mental health services predicted a decreased likelihood of repeat self-harm.Discussion:We found that mortality increases when people who self-harm develop dementia. We argue post-diagnosis support offers a potential opportunity to reduce mortality rates in people with both dementia and self-harm diagnoses.
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