Number of people dying with dementia rises

The proportion of people dying with a recorded dementia diagnosis has more than doubled since 2001.

Last week Public Health England (PHE) launched a range of products that examine the deaths of people recorded with dementia between 2012 and 2014.

Figures show the number of deaths where there was a mention of dementia were: 6.6 per cent of all deaths in 2001; and 15.8 per cent of deaths in 2014. This is most likely to be due to an increase in awareness and recording of dementia.

The new reports were produced by the Dementia Intelligence Network (DIN) in collaboration with the National End of Life Care Intelligence Network (NEoLCIN) and draw on national data to see if there have been changes in dementia deaths over time, who the people dying with dementia were, where they died and the causes of their deaths.

The findings suggest that people who live in more deprived areas die with dementia at a younger age than those who live in more affluent areas.

There are also considerable differences between the place of death in people who have dementia and the general population. People with dementia are considerably more likely to die in hospitals and care homes and less likely to die at home or in end of life care settings such as hospices.

Professor Julia Verne, head of clinical epidemiology, at PHE, says: "We hope that these products can be used to help the NHS and its partners to commission and deliver high quality end of life care in a way that makes the most efficient use of resources and responds to the wishes of dying people and their families.”

Alistair Burns, national clinical director for dementia for NHS England and chair of the PHE’s DIN leadership group, says: “High quality end of life care is a key aspect of the quality of dementia services. This report highlights some important measures of end of life in people with dementia and is helpful in raising the profile of this crucial aspect of dementia care.

Professor Louise Robinson, director, Newcastle University Institute for Ageing, says: “In order to improve the quality of end of life care, we need to accurately know where people with dementia die and under what circumstances, and these new PHE reports significantly help improve this understanding.

“Service commissioners and service providers now need to critically examine current care provision for people with dementia, especially their access to existing community and specialist end of life services, with a view to introducing better systems to facilitate preferred place of care and reduce unnecessary hospital admissions and care transitions in the last year of life,” she adds.

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