SOCIETY
Dementia cases expected to triple worldwide by 2050: WHO
Baku, April 13 (AZERTAC). Cases of dementia - and the heavy social and financial burdens associated with them - are set to soar in the coming decades as life expectancy and medical care improve in poorer countries, the World Health Organization says. Some 35.6 million people were living with dementia in 2010, but that figure is set to double to 65.7 million by 2030, the U.N. health agency said Wednesday. In 2050, it expects dementia cases to triple to 115.4 million.
"The numbers are already large and are increasing rather rapidly," said Dr. Shekhar Saxena, the head of WHO`s mental health division.
Most dementia patients are cared for by relatives who shoulder the bulk of the current estimated annual cost of $604 billion. And the financial burden is expected to rise even faster than the number of cases, WHO said in its first substantial report on the issue. "The catastrophic cost drives millions of households below the poverty line," warned the agency`s director-general, Margaret Chan.
Dementia, a brain illness that affects memory, behavior and the ability to perform even common tasks, affects mostly older people. About 70 percent of cases are believed to be caused by Alzheimer`s. The share of cases in poor and middle-income countries is expected to rise from just under 60 percent today, to over 70 percent by 2050. So far, only eight countries - including Britain, France and Japan - have national programs to address dementia, WHO said. Several others, such as the United States, have plans at the state level. Emerging economies such as China, India and Brazil, for example, have functioning health care systems but don`t have the capacity to deal with the massive rise in dementia, said Saxena. Ensuring doctors and nurses can spot symptoms is a start because lack of proper diagnosis is one of the obstacles to better treatment, he said. Even in rich countries, more than half of dementia cases are overlooked until the disease has reached a late stage, according to the report.
Badly treated or ignored, dementia sufferers can become isolated and vulnerable, especially if they also have poor eyesight or hearing.
And rich countries like the United States should reconsider the drive to place dementia patients in institutions, said Saxena. "That`s a mistake that some developed countries have made that is neither financially viable nor providing the best care," he said.