PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New health services needed for rise in 100-year-olds

2014-06-04
(Press-News.org) Over 35,000 people lived to 100 years or more in England over the last ten years, with a large proportion subsequently dying from frailty exacerbated by pneumonia, according to a new study by King's College London. With the number of centenarians set to grow, end-of-life care needs to be tailored to the increasing frailty in this age group, warn the King's palliative care researchers. Boosting care home capacity and planning health services for the rise in centenarians could help to reduce reliance on hospital admission at the end of life and ensure a better quality of end-of-life.

Centenarians – people aged 100 years or over - are a rapidly growing demographic group worldwide. In 2011, centenarians globally numbered over 300,000. They are projected to reach three million worldwide by 2050, and 17 million at the end of the century. In the UK, this group has steadily increased since 1956 with numbers roughly doubling every 10 years. The latest Office of National Statistics figures indicate that 13,350 centenarians were living in the UK in 2012. Over half a million are expected to be living in the UK by 2066.

Few studies have looked at the health and social care needs of centenarians compared to younger cohorts of older people, or the implications of extreme longevity for health policy and services. The King's study, funded by the National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research (HS&DR) Programme and published in the journal PLOS Medicine, examined the cause and place of death in 35,867 centenarians in England between 2001 and 2010, and compared these findings with those of people who died in their 80s to 90s. The study also looked at factors such as the effect of socioeconomic deprivation on place of death.

The 35,867 people in the study spanned the age range 100-115 years (average age 101), and mainly comprised women (87%) and widowed people (85%). The number of centenarian deaths per year in England increased from 2,800 in 2001 to nearly 4,400 in 2010. Areas of highest deprivation in the UK had the lowest proportion of centenarian deaths, with dying more likely to occur in hospital than in a community setting. The North East of England had the lowest overall proportion of centenarian deaths (4%).

Over the ten-year period, around 60 per cent of centenarians died in a residential or nursing care home, a quarter died in hospital, a tenth died at home and a small number (0.2%) in a hospice.

'Old age' was the most common cause of certifying death (28%), followed by pneumonia (18%) and other respiratory diseases (6%); stroke (10%); heart disease (9%) and other circulatory diseases (10%); dementia and Alzheimer's disease (6%); and cancer (4%). Pneumonia accounted for the largest group of hospital deaths, while across non-hospital settings 'old age' formed the largest category followed by pneumonia. Overall, three-quarters of centenarian death certificates stated 'old age' as either an underlying cause (28%) or contributing cause (47%).

The main causes of death changed with increasing age. In the group aged 80-85 years, heart disease was stated on 19% of death certificates, with 'old age' on only one per cent of certificates.

Dr Catherine Evans, Clinical Lecturer in Palliative Care at the Cicely Saunders Institute, King's College London said: "Centenarians have outlived death from chronic illness, but they are a group living with increasing frailty and vulnerability to pneumonia and other poor health outcomes. We need to plan for health care services that meet the 'hidden needs' of this group, who may decline rapidly if they succumb to an infection or pneumonia. We need to boost high quality care home capacity and responsive primary and community health services to enable people to remain in a comfortable, familiar environment in their last months of life.

"Compared to other European countries the proportion of people aged 90 years and over dying in hospital in England is high, and the number dying in care homes is low. For example, in the Netherlands and Finland more than three-quarters of people aged over 90 die in a long-term care setting such as a nursing home; far fewer die in hospital.

"Hospital admission in the last weeks of life accounts for a third of the total cost of end-of-life care per patient. Increasing the number of care home beds could reduce the reliance on hospital care, but we need to ensure caliber services are provided by GPs, community nurses and other healthcare working with social care providers to enable people to remain in their usual residence at the end of life if they choose."

INFORMATION: END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Unexpected diversity of egg yolk proteins play a key role in ant sociality and castes

2014-06-04
The social insects, including bees, wasps, ants and termites have developed a highly advanced society where division of labor amongst workers to serve the queen's reproduction has long fascinated biologists who have wanted to uncover the molecular pathways driving the complex behavior of insect societies. In the advanced online edition of Molecular Biology and Evolution, Claire Morandin et al. performed molecular evolutionary analyses on the egg yolk forming protein, Vitellogenin (Vg), and its many forms, amongst seven Formica ant species. Vitellogenin is known to play ...

Discovering a hidden source of solar surges

2014-06-04
Cutting-edge observations with the 1.6-meter telescope at Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) in California have taken research into the structure and activity of the Sun to new levels of understanding. Operated by New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT), the telescope at Big Bear is the most powerful ground-based instrument dedicated to studying the Sun. A group of astronomers led by Dr. Santiago Vargas Domínguez has analyzed the highest- resolution solar observations ever made. A summary of their work at BBSO was presented on June 2 at the 224th meeting of the American ...

New device isolates most aggressive cancer cells

2014-06-04
ITHACA, N.Y. – Not all cancer cells are created equal – some stay put in the primary tumor, while others move and invade elsewhere. A major goal for cancer research is predicting which cells will metastasize, and why. A Cornell cancer research team is taking a new approach to screening for these dangerous cells, using a microfluidic device they invented that isolates only the most aggressive, metastatic cells. "The approach we've taken is a reverse approach from what is conventionally done," said Cynthia Reinhart-King, associate professor of biomedical engineering and ...

Many breast cancer patients don't get treatment for heart problems

2014-06-03
Only a third of older breast cancer patients saw a cardiologist within 90 days of developing heart problems, in a study presented at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research 2014 Scientific Sessions. Breast cancer patients with heart problems who saw a cardiologist were more likely to receive standard therapy for their heart failure than those who did not see a heart specialist, the study found. "The majority of older women who develop heart problems after their breast cancer therapy aren't treated by a cardiologist, and they had lower ...

Community program helps lower blood pressure among minorities

2014-06-03
Minorities at a higher risk of developing hypertension used a community-based program to significantly lower their blood pressure, researchers said at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research 2014 Scientific Sessions. Minorities at a higher risk of developing hypertension used a community-based program to significantly lower their blood pressure, researchers said at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research 2014 Scientific Sessions. Researchers assessed the use of the American Heart Association's Check. Change. ...

Implanted heart device linked to increased survival

2014-06-03
DURHAM, N.C. -- Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) are associated with improved survival among heart failure patients whose left ventricles only pump 30 to 35 percent of blood out of the heart with each contraction, according to a study from the Duke Clinical Research Institute. The findings, published in the June 4 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, support existing recommendations to implant ICDs in patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) – a measurement of how much blood is squeezed out of the heart – of 35 percent ...

High risk of recurrence of 2 life-threatening adverse drug reactions

2014-06-03
Individuals who are hospitalized for the skin conditions of Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis appear to have a high risk of recurrence, according to a study in the June 4 issue of JAMA. Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) are life-threatening conditions that develop primarily as responses to drugs, and result in extensive epidermal detachment (upper layers of the skin detach from the lower layers). Recurrence has been reported in isolated cases, and the overall risk of recurrence has been unknown, according to background ...

Outcomes for older adults with pneumonia who receive treatment including azithromycin

2014-06-03
In a study that included nearly 65,000 older patients hospitalized with pneumonia, treatment that included azithromycin compared with other antibiotics was associated with a significantly lower risk of death and a slightly increased risk of heart attack, according to a study in the June 4 issue of JAMA. Pneumonia and influenza together are the eighth leading cause of death and the leading causes of infectious death in the United States. Although clinical practice guidelines recommend combination therapy with macrolides (a class of antibiotics), including azithromycin, ...

Preventive placement of ICDs for less severe heart failure may improve survival

2014-06-03
An examination of the benefit of preventive placement of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) in patients with a less severe level of heart failure, a group not well represented in clinical trials, finds significantly better survival at three years than that of similar patients with no ICD, according to a study in the June 4 issue of JAMA. Although clinical trials have established the ICD as the best currently available therapy to prevent sudden cardiac death in patients with heart failure, some uncertainties remain regarding preventive use of ICDs in patients ...

Study: New test predicts if breast cancer will spread

Study: New test predicts if breast cancer will spread
2014-06-03
June 3, 2014 – BRONX, NY – The study was led by researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI)─designated Albert Einstein Cancer Center of Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University and Montefiore Einstein Center for Cancer Care and was published online today in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute (JNCI). "Tests assessing metastatic risk can help doctors identify which patients should receive aggressive therapy and which patients should be spared," said Thomas Rohan, M.D., Ph.D., the lead and corresponding author of the study and professor ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

High-speed all-optical neural networks empowered spatiotemporal mode multiplexing

High-energy-density barocaloric material could enable smaller, lighter solid-state cooling devices

Progresses on damped wave equations: Multi-wave Stability from partially degenerate flux

First discoveries from new Subaru Telescope program

Ultrafast laser shock straining in chiral chain 2D materials: Mold topology‑controlled anisotropic deformation

Socially aware AI helps autonomous vehicles weave through crowds without collisions

KAIST unveils cause of performance degradation in electric vehicle high-nickel batteries: "added with good intentions​

New ECU tool can help concussion patients manage fear and improve recovery 

People with diabetes face higher risk of sudden cardiac death

Breast density notification increases levels of confusion and anxiousness among women

K’gari’s world famous lakes could be at risk of drying

Airplane and hospital air is cleaner than you might think

Concern over harmful medical advice from social media influencers

Telling women as part of mammography screening that they have dense breasts may have unintended effects

Note- taking alone or combined with large language models helps students understand and remember better than large language models alone

Astronomers spot one of the largest spinning structures ever found in the Universe

Retinal organoid platform identifies biomarkers and affords genetic testing for retinal disease 

New roadmap reveals how everyday chemicals and microbes interact to fuel antimicrobial resistance

Scientists clarify how much metal in soil is “too much” for people and the environment​

Breakthrough pediatric kidney therapy emerges from U. Iowa research

Breakthrough iron-based magnetic material achieves major reduction in core loss

New design tackles heat challenges in high-power fiber lasers

Rapid fabrication of self-propelled, steerable magnetic microcatheters for precision medicine

Poor kidney health linked to higher levels of Alzheimer’s biomarkers in blood

A metamaterial that bridges air and water

Evaluating building materials for climate impact and noise suppression

Scores of dinosaurs walked and swam along a Bolivian shoreline

Captive bottlenose dolphins vary vocalizations during enrichment activities

Adults who want children favor older-looking partners (but not for their money), study suggests

Authoritative parenting styles are associated with better mental health and self-esteem among adolescents, while authoritarian parenting styles are associated with depression and lower self-esteem and

[Press-News.org] New health services needed for rise in 100-year-olds