Articles by Antonanzas, Rive, Badenas, Gomez-Lus, and Guilhaume (2006) found that various treatments for Alzheimer's disease (AD) affect research. In the United States and many other developed countries, AD patients are often housed in facilities at some stage of disease and are said to place a burden on caregivers. In Spain, AD is rarely institutionalized disease; they are often cared for by local caregivers.
Is there a cure for Alzheimer's disease? There is currently no clear treatment or cure for Alzheimer's disease. Unfortunately, there are a lot of unethical people selling so-called "treatment". These treatments are usually expensive and they do not cure AD. However, aging is such a terrible problem and these errant treatments continue to be sold as families are eager to seek help from their loved ones. Most of them do not have effective scientific evidence. What is the scope of Alzheimer's disease? Alzheimer's disease is afflicting about 4 million Americans and one third of us is an elderly relative and is presumed to face this disease. More than 100,000 deaths annually lead to Alzheimer's disease as the fourth leading cause of death in adults. Currently, half of the patients with special nursing home are suffering, making AD a problem of expensive public health and long-term care.
Because Alzheimer's disease can not be cured and disintegrated, nursing is one of the important treatments for treating Alzheimer's disease. It is needless to say that treatment is often done by the patient's close relatives and that this profound involvement in the treatment process has a profound effect on the psychosocial, economic and many other aspects of life care of Alzheimer's disease patients . People with sickness may not know them, so if you live under a certain stress and observe the progress of the disease, urinary incontinence may occur. Approximately 30% of patients have hallucinations and other delusional symptoms. Subjects also lost knowledge about their disease processes and limitations (disease condition disapproval) (Frostl, Kurtz, 1999). Relatives refuse family therapy for patients with Alzheimer's disease and live with pressure so that they can be relocated to a long-term medical institution (Frostl, Kurtz, 1999)