Low Prevalence of Legal Protection Among the Elderly With Neurocognitive Disorders in France

The prevalence of major neurocognitive disorders (MNCD) increases to 30% after 80 years of age. Vulnerability often goes unnoticed for a long time, and patients are seldom subject to legal protection (LP), creating an ethical and legal dilemma. The French National Alzheimer's Database (BNA) is...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAlzheimer disease and associated disorders Vol. 39; no. 1; p. 64
Main Authors Koskas, Pierre, Hounkonnou, Cornélia P A, Couffignal, Camille
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.01.2025
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ISSN1546-4156
DOI10.1097/WAD.0000000000000653

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Summary:The prevalence of major neurocognitive disorders (MNCD) increases to 30% after 80 years of age. Vulnerability often goes unnoticed for a long time, and patients are seldom subject to legal protection (LP), creating an ethical and legal dilemma. The French National Alzheimer's Database (BNA) is a national network set up in 2005 to collect data on neurocognitive disorders from all memory clinics in France. Data extraction from the BNA in 2022 produced a sample of 1,187,199 patients. We retained 795,953 patients, with a mean age of 78 years, and approximately two-thirds of the patients were women. We excluded patients with no medical assessment (n=135,810), without MNCD (n=237,209), birth year ≥1981 (n=18,189), and consultation date <2005 (n=38). A total of 32,593 patients (4.09%) have had LP during the 15-year study period. They have lower MMSE scores than others (17.9±6.6 vs. 20.6±6.5 P<0.01), more likely to live alone (45.25% vs. 36,1% P<0.01) or at nursing home (22.83% vs. 8.35% P<0.01). The low prevalence of LP among persons with MNCD emphasizes the potential vulnerability and legal risk of this group.
ISSN:1546-4156
DOI:10.1097/WAD.0000000000000653