"Falls may be defined as unexpected events that people come to the ground, floor or lower levels" (Struksness, Lindstrom, Lord, Slaasletten, Johansson, et al., 2011). Falling is very common in elderly people, but in the case of mental disorders such as dementia, the problem is more serious. This cross-sectional study shows that the most common cause of caregivers reporting falls is a personal factor such as physical and mental damage.
Falls are a common cause of death for people over the age of 65. After the accident, the death rate due to fall has not changed relatively over the past 40 years. Dementia continues to increase the risk of falls. Even if I know ... more content
Coding keeps the confidentiality of the questionnaire responses. (Struksness et al., 2011)
This special study was conducted in several nursing home for the elderly. Since the questionnaire and the responses of respondents were collected, research was conducted using qualitative research methods. In this study, worked with elderly people with dementia, regular nurses were selected to participate in the study. The permission to conduct this research came from the director of all the special nursing home for the community. The sample used in this study was an experienced nurse who worked at four special nursing home for Alzheimer's disease (Struksness et al., 2011).
The program is implemented using the questionnaire format. Questions on the questionnaire are based on four main areas. Caregiver's experience and correspondence related to the cause of falling, caregiver intervention on fall prevention, document and reporting procedure, and falling event. 64 questions are divided into four different types of people. The four different categories are registered nurse, registered nurse, unskilled nurse, and other occupations (Struksness et al., 2011, p. 3). Of the 64 questions, 7 is the background problem. The other 57 questions are dealt with in four major areas of autumn. 28 years
Dementia is a brain disorder that has a serious effect on human's ability to perform daily activities. The most common form of dementia in the elderly is Alzheimer's disease (AD), which first involves controlling the heart, memory, and brain parts of the language. Although scientists are learning day by day, they do not know the cause of Alzheimer's disease nor do they have any cure. Scientists believe that 4.5 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease. This disease usually develops after age 60 and the risk increases with age. There is a possibility that young people also take AD, but this is not common. Approximately 5% of males and females aged 65 to 74 suffer from AD, and nearly 85% of people aged 85 and older may have this disorder. But it is important to note that AD is not a normal part of aging.
Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of age-related dementia. Elderly people with dementia are usually diagnosed as "cerebral arteriosclerosis" and actually suffer from Alzheimer's disease. Vascular dementia is indeed associated with Alzheimer's disease, but it is usually associated with clear findings showing previous stroke (clear, paralysis, pseudo-ocular paralysis, aphasia, etc.). Amyloid also gathers in the arterial wall of patients with Alzheimer's disease and may cause coexistence of vascular dementia (amyloid angiopathy)
Alzheimer's disease is the most common dementia of the elderly. The terms "Alzheimer's disease" and "dementia" are often used interchangeably, but the symptoms are not the same. The term "dementia" means that a person can no longer be independently active, as continuous impairment of multiple mental abilities can affect memory, attention and inference. Dementia may be caused by various medical conditions such as severe head injury and big stroke. Other common dementias are dementia with Lewy bodies, frontal temporal dementia, vascular dementia, and dementia of Parkinson's disease (FCA Fact Sheet, Alzheimer's Disease: see this dementia What is its significance)?
Dementia usually occurs in older age. This is rare among people under the age of 60. As you get older, the risk of dementia increases. Symptoms of dementia include difficulties in many areas of mental function. Some symptoms have cognitive abilities such as language, memory, perception, emotional behavior or personality, critical thinking, calculation and judgment. Dementia usually begins with forgetfulness. Mild cognitive impairment is a phase between normal forgetting and onset of dementia due to aging. MCI patients have minor problems in their thought and memory and do not interfere with daily activities. They often experience forgetfulness