Exploring what progress is being made in the development of health promotion material for vascular dementia: A systematic review of the evidence

Author:

Price Rachel S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK

Abstract

AbstractA systematic review conducted by Price and Keady (Journal of Nursing and Healthcare of Chronic Illness, 2, 88 and 2010) demonstrated that there was a dearth of health‐promoting literature available for people diagnosed with vascular dementia. The correlation between health behavior and the onset of cardiovascular change that can lead to vascular dementia had demonstrated a need for health education and health‐promoting information to be made accessible to vulnerable populations to ameliorate the risk of cognitive decline because of cardiovascular disease. Dementia is a progressive and life‐limiting condition and with limited treatment options and a lack of progress in identifying a way to delay onset or even cure the condition. Focus must be targeted towards risk reduction strategies that serve to reduce onset and decline and limit the global burden on not only the individual with the condition and their carers but also to the health and social care economy. To identify the progress that has been made in developing health‐promoting literature and patient education guidance since 2010 a systematic literature review was undertaken. Using thematic analysis, CINAHL, MEDLINE, and psych INFO databases were accessed and following PRISMA guidelines an inclusion and exclusion criteria was developed in order to locate peer‐reviewed articles. Titles and abstracts were reviewed to identify a match with key terms, and from 133 screened abstracts eight studies met the inclusion requirements. From the eight studies, thematic analysis was implemented to identify shared understanding of experiences relating to health promotion in vascular dementia. The methodology for the study was replicated from the authors’ previous systematic review in 2010. Five key themes were identified in the literature (Healthy heart healthy brain; Risk factors; Risk reduction/modification; Interventions; Absence of targeted health promotion). From what little evidence was available to review the thematic analysis has demonstrated developments in knowledge into the link between the onset of cognitive impairment and vascular dementia because of compromised cardiovascular health. Modifying health behavior has become essential in ameliorating the risk of vascular cognitive decline. With these developments the synthesis of the literature demonstrates that even with these insights there continues to be a lack of targeted material that individuals can access to understand the link between cardiovascular health and cognitive decline. It is recognized that maximizing cardiovascular health has the potential to lessen the risk of vascular cognitive impairment and vascular dementia developing and progressing yet targeted health promoting material remains lacking. With the developments in understanding the causal links between poor cardiovascular health, vascular cognitive impairment, and vascular dementia progress now needs to be made in developing targeted health promotion material for individuals to access to share this knowledge to reduce the potential onset and subsequent burden of dementia.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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