Abstract

Dementia prevalence is increasing worldwide and developing countries are expected to carry the highest burden of this. Dementia has high care needs and no current effective long-term treatment. However, factors associated with active ageing (e.g., longer employment; participation in society; independent, healthy and secure living; and enabling environments to allow people to remain psychosocially and physically active) could help maintain independence in older people for longer. We investigated proxy indicators of the Active Ageing Index (AAI), which were offset against dementia and dependency (assessed by Instrumental Activities of Daily Living or IADL) in multi-ethnic urban (Jakarta) and rural (Sumedang and Borobudur) health care districts on Java, Indonesia. Dementia was assessed using validated cognitive dementia screening tests, the IADL and carer reports. Dementia and dependency prevalence showed large interregional differences and were highest in rural Borobudur. Dementia and dependency were associated with an older age, lower education (for dementia), worse physical health (for dependency) and not engaging in psychosocial activities, such as attending community events, reading (for dementia) and sport activities (for dependency). By supporting active ageing activities in Puskesmas (primary health care centers) and improving access to medical care, rural areas could possibly reduce dementia and dependency risk. Our follow-up study planned in 2021 should illustrate whether recent relevant policies have rendered success in these areas. Using active ageing indicators could focus policies to support regions with targeted interventions to compress care needs in older people.

Highlights

  • Dementia is a growing health and economic concern worldwide, with absolute growth of its numbers estimated to be highest in East Asia [1]

  • 10% and 12% of the Indonesian population [2,4]. With this proportion of Indonesian older people growing to 21% of the population by 2050 [2], the World Alzheimer Report estimated that from around 1 million people with dementia in Indonesia in 2015, this would increase to 2 million people afflicted by 2030, which number would double again two decades later [1]

  • The overall estimate over 3 multi-ethnic sites on Java in this 2006/7 study was that around 9% of people screened over 60 years of age were suspected of having dementia

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Summary

Meléndez-Moral and Joost van

School of Sports, Exercise &Health Sciences, National Centre for Sports and Exercise Medicine, Loughborough University, Loughborough LE11 3TU, UK Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Atma Jaya Catholic University of Indonesia, Daerah Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Respati, Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta 55281, Indonesia

Introduction
Participants
Statistical Analyses
Are you currently employed
Mental well-beingAre you more or less happy than others you know?
Demographics
Suspected Dementia and Dependency Prevalence among Sites
Discussion
Full Text
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