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Emergency/urgent hospitalizations linked to accelerated cognitive decline in older adults

By Admin | March 26, 2019

Emergency and urgent hospitalizations are associated with an increased rate of cognitive decline in older adults, report researchers at Rush University Medical Center. Results of their study, published in the Jan. 11, 2019, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, shows that hospitalization may be a more of a major risk factor for long-term cognitive decline in older adults than previously recognized.

"We found that those who have non-elective (emergency or urgent) hospitalizations and who have not previously been diagnosed with dementia or Alzheimer's disease had a in cognitive function (i.e., thinking abilities) compared to the prehospital rates," said Bryan James, Ph.D., an epidemiologist and in the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center and an assistant professor in the Rush Department of Internal Medicine. "By comparison, people who were never hospitalized and those who had elective hospitalizations did not experience the drastic decline in cognitive function."

For more information, please read, Emergency/urgent hospitalizations linked to accelerated cognitive decline in older adults, by Medical Express. 

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