City
Epaper

1 in 5 Indian adults over 60 show signs of mild neurocognitive disorder: Study

By IANS | Updated: February 9, 2024 11:45 IST

New Delhi, Feb 9 Almost 1 in 5 Indian adults aged 60+ show signs of mild neurocognitive disorder, ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Feb 9 Almost 1 in 5 Indian adults aged 60+ show signs of mild neurocognitive disorder, according to a study.

Given an estimated 138 million adults over 60 years of age in India, these estimates suggest approximately 24 million and 9.9 million older adults in India are living with mild and major neurocognitive disorder, respectively, revealed the study published in the journal PLOS One.

The findings showed that the prevalence of major neurocognitive disorder was greater with older ages - from about 4 per cent among those aged 60-64 years to 15.2 per cent among those aged over 80 years.

"India, with its rapidly aging population, faces an alarming burden of dementia," said the team including from St. John’s Medical College in Bengaluru and Johns Hopkins University in the US.

For the study, the team recruited almost 4,100 participants residing in 18 geographically and linguistically diverse states such as Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, Delhi, West Bengal, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, among others. The majority of the group was aged 60-79 years.

They found that the prevalence is higher with older age, less educational attainment, and among illiterate and rural-living older adults.

These findings highlight the growing importance of dementia in India.

"The prevalence of dementia in India is higher than previously recognised. These findings, coupled with a growing number of older adults in the coming decades in India, have important implications for society, public health, and families," the researchers said in the paper.

The team analysed the participants using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) -- a widely recognised clinical diagnostic authority.

Tbe results showed that the population prevalence of DSM-5 mild and major neurocognitive disorder was 17.6 per cent and 7.2 per cent, respectively.

Further, 12 per cent reported severe loss in at least one ADL (activities of daily living) and 8.5 per cent reported impairment in any IADL (instrumental activities of daily living).

Major neurocognitive disorder was more prevalent among illiterate (9.3 per cent) than literate (5 per cent) and rural (10.3 per cent) than urban (4.9 per cent)

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets UAE Foreign Minister in Abu Dhabi; discusses West Asia security and strategic partnership

CricketSanju Samson credits CSK trust, resilience after match-winning century against DC in IPL 2026 clash

PoliticsFormer minister V Senthil Balaji's presence spices up contest in Coimbatore South

InternationalIran-US hold two rounds of talks in Islamabad, third round expected 'tonight or tomorrow'

NationalPresident Murmu expresses condolences over Katihar road accident

Health Realted Stories

HealthBihar bans private practice of government doctors​

HealthGovt mulls cough syrups ban for kids under 2 amid safety concerns: Report

Health‘India Pharma 2026’ to drive India’s transition to global innovation hub

HealthCARI Bengaluru 1st CCRAS institute to get landmark ISO accreditation in biochemistry, haematology

HealthThis common nutrient could supercharge cancer treatment: Study