Estimating the Prevalence of Dementia in New Zealand Using Capture‐Recapture Analysis on Routinely Collected Health Data

Author:

Ma'u E.12ORCID,Cullum S.13ORCID,Mukadam N.45ORCID,Davis D.6,Rivera‐Rodriguez C.7,Cheung G.18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological Medicine University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

2. Mental Health Services for Older People Te Whatu Ora Waikato Hamilton New Zealand

3. Koropiko Mental Health Services for Older People Te Whatu Ora Counties Manukau Auckland New Zealand

4. Division of Psychiatry University College London London UK

5. Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust St Pancras Hospital London UK

6. MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing University College London London UK

7. Department of Statistics University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

8. Awhi Mātua Te Whatu Ora Te Toka Tumai Auckland Auckland New Zealand

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectivesCommunity based dementia prevalence studies are expensive and resource intensive. Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) has never had a community based dementia prevalence study representing all major ethnic groups. In recent years, dementia prevalence estimates have been derived from routinely collected health data but issues of underdiagnosis and undercoding limit their utility. Capture‐recapture techniques can estimate the number of dementia cases missing from health datasets by modelling the ascertained overlaps between linked data sources.MethodsThree routinely collected national health data sets—interRAI, Public hospital discharges, and Pharmaceuticals—were linked and all prevalent cases of dementia in NZ for the year 1 January 2021–31 December 2021 were identified. Capture‐recapture analysis fitted eight loglinear models to the data, with the best fitting model used to estimate the number of prevalent cases missing from all three datasets.ResultsWe estimated that almost half (47.8%) of dementia cases are not present in any of the three datasets. Dementia prevalence increased from 3.7% to 7.1% (95% CI 6.9%–7.4%) in the NZ 60+ population and from 4.9% to 9.2% (95% CI 8.9%–9.6%) in the NZ 65+ population when missing cases were included. Estimates of missing cases were significantly higher (p < 0.001) in Māori (49.2%), Pacific peoples (50.6%) and Asian (59.6%) compared to Europeans (46.4%).ConclusionsThis study provides updated estimates of dementia prevalence in NZ and the proportion of undiagnosed dementia in NZ, highlighting the need for better access to dementia assessment and diagnosis.

Publisher

Wiley

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