Who Gets Alzheimer’s disease?

bursin.jpg Alzheimer’s disease is often think of as a normal part of aging. But it is not. It is something that is inevitable when someone reached in their later life. Alzheimer’s disease is a disease. It is rather one of the dementing disorders, a group of brain diseases that lead to the loss of mental and physical functions. A very small minority of Alzheimers patients are under 50 years of age. Most are over 65. We have to note that Alzheimers disease is the exception, rather than the rule, in old age. Only 5 to 6 percent of older people are afflicted by Alzheimer’s disease or a related dementia.

The research shows that 1 percent of the population aged 65-74 has severe dementia, the rise of 7 percent in the age group of 75-84-and 25 percent of the 85 or older. Approximately 3 to 4 million Americans have one of these debilitating diseases.

At least half of the population of the United States in the nursing homes and care facilities for older people, Alzheimer’s disease or a disorder associated, in the year 1985 the annual cost for the care of people with Alzheimer’s disease and dementia in part of the community, institutional and felt between $ 24 billion and 48 billion US dollars only to the direct costs, and is probably higher today. While our population is ageing and the number of Alzheimer’s patients increases, the cost of health care rising, too. Read more