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A systematic review and meta-analysis of dementia prevalence in seven developing countries: a STRiDE project

Authors :
Emily Freeman
R Jacobs
Christine W. Musyimi
Yuda Turana
Claudia Iveth Astudillo-García
Ishtar Govia
Cleusa P. Ferri
Adelina Comas-Herrera
Martin Knapp
Tara Puspitarini Sani
Emiliano Albanese
STRiDE team
Marguerite Schneider
A Ibnidris
Nicolas Farina
Sube Banerjee
Imelda Theresia
Suvarna Alladi
Sumaiyah Docrat
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The STRiDE project sets out to support the development of effective dementia policy in middle-income countries (Brazil, India, Indonesia, Jamaica, Kenya, Mexico, and South Africa). As part of this it will generate new data about the prevalence of dementia for a subset of these countries. This study aims to identify the current estimates of dementia prevalence in these countries and where the gaps lie in the current literature. A systematic review was completed on 30th April 2019 across electronic databases, identifying dementia prevalence literature originating from any of the seven countries. Four hundred and twenty-nine records were identified following de-duplication; 28 studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in the systematic review. Pooled estimates of dementia prevalence ranged from 2% to 9% based on DSM-IV criteria; these figures were generally higher in studies using other diagnostic criteria (e.g. the 10/66 algorithm). Available prevalence data varied between countries. Only Brazil, Mexico and India had data derived from studies judged as having a low risk of bias. Irrespective of country, studies often were not explicit in detailing the representativeness of their sample, or whether there was non-response bias. Further transparent and externally valid dementia prevalence research is needed across the STRiDE countries.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17441692
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....46815557cdbc2ef1a0a493479430d7ce