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

Community-based programs in senior centers may lower health care use and costs for people with dementia

Rutgers researchers examine healthcare utilization and costs among adults living with dementia in municipalities with dementia-focused senior centers

2024-10-02
(Press-News.org) Living with dementia in communities with senior centers providing access to adult day health and social services was associated with fewer hospitalizations and lower health care use and Medicare costs, according to researchers from Rutgers University-New Brunswick and the University of Massachusetts Boston.

The results, published in Heath Affairs Scholar, underscore the potential of senior centers in minimizing health care costs and acute care usage among those with dementia, particularly in smaller communities where centers provide access to such services.

“Our findings provide evidence to support the growing interest in increasing funding for community-based organizations to improve health,” said Emily A. Greenfield, professor of social work and director of the Hub for Aging Collaboration at the Rutgers University School of Social Work. “Importantly, our work provides empirical evidence to support the recognition of senior centers as community-based assets with the potential to bring value to healthcare systems.”

Adult day health services offer specialized clinical care for community-dwelling older adults, including nursing services, health monitoring, medication administration, and occupational therapy. Social adult day services provide social and recreational activities in a supervised setting for people with mild to acute conditions. Unlike adult day health services, social adult day services aren’t licensed to provide clinical care.

The researchers said there is widespread agreement and interest among policymakers and practitioners about the role of community-based services in enhancing health outcomes among individuals living with dementia and their caregivers, though few studies have explored the impact of programming offered in senior centers on health outcomes among people living with dementia.

“In partnership with The Massachusetts Councils on Aging, we conducted a comprehensive assessment of the breadth and depth of the functions of councils on aging in our state,” said Caitlin Coyle, director of the Center for Social and Demographic Research on Aging at the University of Massachusetts Boston. “Collecting data on organizational and programmatic characteristics of councils on aging – such as staffing, financing and types of services offered – can provide them with data to demonstrate their impact on the communities they serve.”

The study used data from the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and data from the statewide census of the municipally based councils on aging and senior centers in Massachusetts. The sample included 48,474 adult residents with a diagnosis of dementia who were ages 75 years and older.

The researchers said Massachusetts is an ideal place to study the health systems impact of such social care given that all but one of the 351 municipalities in Massachusetts have councils on aging – nearly synonymous with senior centers – that often provide dementia-focused programming.

Many of New Jersey’s municipalities also have senior centers, whose operations are largely funded by local and private investments. The researchers say the extent to which New Jersey senior centers offer adult day health and related services is unknown due to limited research on community-based aging organizations in the state.

Because these associations are correlational, the authors cannot conclude that one directly causes the other. But, considering the evidence in support of cost savings, the researchers said future research will help better understand the impact of dementia-focused programs offered through senior centers on the healthcare utilization of community-dwelling people living with dementia.

Ayse Akincigil, associate professor at the School of Social Work and health economist at the Rutgers Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research of Rutgers, was lead author on the study. Co-authors include Divya Bhagianadh of University of Arkansas; Clara J. Scher, Emily A. Greenfield, and Natalie E. Pope of Rutgers University; and Ceara Somerville and Caitlin Coyle of University of Massachusetts Boston.

This research was funded by The Alzheimer’s Association [AARG-20-684159], the Massachusetts Executive Office of Elder Affairs and the Massachusetts Councils on Aging.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Q&A: UW researchers examine link between light pollution and interest in astronomy

2024-10-02
Picture walking outside on a dark, cloudless evening. You look up to admire the stars — maybe even a planet, if you’re lucky — and a sense of wonder washes of you. New research from the University of Washington shows this might be more than a memorable experience: It could ultimately spark scientific curiosity and influence life choices. Rodolfo Cortes Barragan, research scientist the UW Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences (I-LABS), and Andrew Meltzoff, co-director of I-LABS and professor of psychology, recently co-authored a study in Nature Scientific Reports showing a link between the ability to see the stars ...

PCORI awards $37 million to accelerate implementation of evidence-based health research

PCORI awards $37 million to accelerate implementation of evidence-based health research
2024-10-02
WASHINGTON, D.C., Oct. 2, 2024 — The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) today announced $37 million in funding awards through its Health Systems Implementation Initiative (HSII). These awards will support 25 projects implementing PCORI-funded comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER) findings in participating HSII health systems.   Key Points: Twenty-five HSII participant health systems, covering more than 2,300 care sites across the country, received PCORI funding awards. HSII implementation projects will focus on one of two main areas: Improving antibiotic ...

Researchers develop insights into KRAS mutations in pancreatic cancers

Researchers develop insights into KRAS mutations in pancreatic cancers
2024-10-02
A common mutation in the KRAS gene is associated with improved overall survival in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) compared with other variants, in part because the mutation appears to lead to less invasiveness and weaker biological activity, according to a multicenter study conducted at Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and other institutions. The research, published August 29 in Cancer Cell, demonstrates that KRAS mutations, which occur in about 95 percent of people who ...

New CAMH-led study highlights effective treatment for male postpartum depression

New CAMH-led study highlights effective treatment for male postpartum depression
2024-10-02
(Toronto, Canada) – A new study from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), in collaboration with leading researchers in Pakistan, has demonstrated the effectiveness of an integrated psychosocial intervention aimed at improving parenting skills and symptoms of depression. The treatment was effective for male postpartum depression (PPD) in a cohort of Pakistani fathers, improving both paternal mental health and child development outcomes. “Male mental health, and especially postpartum depression in fathers, remains a stigmatized and understudied area,” says Dr. Ishrat Husain, the study's lead investigator and senior ...

Global study highlights the life-saving impact of Guideline-Directed Medical Therapy (GDMT) in heart failure patients

2024-10-02
Heart failure is a rapidly growing public health issue that can be difficult to manage on a global scale. But there are tools that exist that can improve outcomes, such as guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT). New UCLA-led research highlights the important role that these guidelines can play in reducing mortality rates for individuals suffering from heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), a type of heart failure affecting an estimated 29 million people worldwide. “These guidelines are being significantly underutilized in clinical settings globally and there ...

New method quantifies single-cell data’s risk of private information leakage

2024-10-02
Access to publicly available human single-cell gene expression datasets, or scRNA-seq datasets, has significantly enhanced researchers’ understanding of both complex biological systems and the etymology of various diseases. However, the increase in accessibility raises a greater concern about the privacy of the individuals who donated the cells and the likelihood of their private health details being shared without consent.  Previous studies on these privacy breaches have focused on bulk gene expression data sharing, where the average expression levels of genes are measured across a large population of cells from a tissue or sample rather than an individual cell. Because single-cell ...

Eyes on the fries: how our vision creates a food trend

Eyes on the fries: how our vision creates a food trend
2024-10-02
KEY POINTS Human judgement of food images is influenced by judgements that precede it Experiment tested reactions of more than 600 people making food choices Highly relevant given widespread use of Uber Eats or phone-based menus Finding could assist treatments for eating disorders or assist with food marketing Research at the University of Sydney has revealed that we don’t judge food simply on its merits but are influenced by what we have seen beforehand, a cascading phenomenon known as ‘serial dependence’. The research, published today in the high-impact journal Current Biology, was conducted by Professors David Alais ...

UVM scientist maps fruit fly brain

2024-10-02
A team of scientists supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH)’s The BRAIN Initiative®, including Davi Bock, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Neurological Sciences at UVM’s Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine, recently made a substantial advancement in neurobiological research by successfully mapping the entire brain of Drosophila melanogaster, more commonly known as the fruit fly. The study, titled “Whole-brain annotation and multi-connectome cell typing of Drosophila,” recently published ...

Bridging the gap: how pragmatic trials can better serve healthcare systems

2024-10-02
Boston, MA – A new thought piece led by the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute with collaborators from Duke University and Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute highlights the challenges facing healthcare researchers and decision makers in the quest to improve population health in a constantly evolving healthcare landscape. The authors offer strategies to enhance the effectiveness of pragmatic clinical trials and increase their impact on real-world healthcare settings. The Viewpoint appears October 2 in JAMA. Pragmatic clinical trials, designed to inform health ...

UChicago scientists decode key mutation in many cancers

2024-10-02
Inside every cell, inside every nucleus, your continued existence depends on an incredibly complicated dance. Proteins are constantly wrapping and unwrapping DNA, and even minor missteps can lead to cancer.   A new study from the University of Chicago reveals a previously unknown part of this dance—one with significant implications for human health.   In the study, published Oct. 2 in Nature, a team of scientists led by UChicago Prof. Chuan He, in collaboration with University of Texas Health Science Center at ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

School meals could unlock major gains for human and planetary health

Menopause hormone therapy does not appear to impact dementia risk

Signature patterns of brain activity may help predict recovery from traumatic brain injury

Dresden study uncovers new key mechanism in cancer cells

New species are now being discovered faster than ever before, study suggests

Cannabis-based products show limited short-term benefit for chronic pain, with increased risk of adverse effects

Cannabis products with more THC slightly reduce pain but cause more side effects

Clearing the brain of aging cells could aid epilepsy and reduce seizures

Brain injuries linked with potential risk of suicide, new study finds

New technique lights up where drugs go in the body, cell by cell

New study finds movement of fishing fleets can reveal shifts in marine ecosystems

Embargoed: New evidence points to potential treatment for vascular dementia

Study uncovers disrupted brain balance in alcohol dependence

Working in groups can help Republicans and Democrats agree on controversial content moderation online

Structural findings reveal how distinct GPCR ligands create different levels of activation

Anything-goes “anyons” may be at the root of surprising quantum experiments

UC review: Maximizing workplace opportunity for veterans

From generation to complex control: Metasurfaces make perfect vortex beams "within reach"

Thin-film lithium niobate-based detector: recent advances and perspectives

Exploring why some people may tend to persistently make bad choices

How cells balance their protein levels

Nirsevimab vs RSVpreF vaccine for RSV–related hospitalization in newborns

Effectiveness and impact of maternal RSV immunization and nirsevimab on medically attended RSV in US children

AI gives scientists a boost, but at the cost of too many mediocre papers

Next-generation vision model maps tree growth at sub-meter precision

Genes aren’t destiny for inherited blindness, study shows

MIT study: High-fat diets make liver cells more likely to become cancerous

Exposure to multiple fine particulate matter components and incident depression in the US Medicare population

Risk of burdensome health care spending over time in the US

Nirsevimab against hospitalizations and emergency department visits for lower respiratory tract infection in infants

[Press-News.org] Community-based programs in senior centers may lower health care use and costs for people with dementia
Rutgers researchers examine healthcare utilization and costs among adults living with dementia in municipalities with dementia-focused senior centers