The Link Between Cognitive
Function
and Sexuality in Older Adults
and Sexuality in Older Adults
Journal
of the American Geriatrics Society Research Summary –
September 20, 2018 -- The number of
people who live at home with Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), a brain disease that
causes abnormal changes that kill brain cells, is expected to grow from 3.2
million today to more than 8 million in 2050.
Experts agree that we
know very little about sexuality among people living at home with AD
or other cognitive problems. Older adults who have cognitive problems that
impact the way they think and make decisions may ask physicians to help
managing sexual problems. And caregivers may ask physicians about sexuality in
the older adults for whom they provide care.
One frequently asked
question is: Do older adults always have the capacity to consent to sexual
activity?
Researchers have
previously shown that the majority of people aged 57 to 85 have a spouse or
other intimate partner and, among those with a partner, most are sexually
active. Having an active sexual life is linked to better physical and mental
health, higher quality of life, and lower rates of loneliness.
To learn more about the
connection between sexuality and cognitive status, researchers designed a new
study. They analyzed data from the National Social Life, Health, and Aging
Project to learn more about the relationship between sexual behavior, function,
and cognition (people’s ability to think and make decisions). Their study was
published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
Based on their study,
the researchers reported that:
·
83 percent of men
and 57 percent of women had an intimate partner. The more impaired
participants’ abilities to think and make decisions were, the less likely they
were to have an intimate partner.
·
Women with lower
cognitive scores were less likely than men with lower cognitive scores to have
intimate partners.
·
Nearly half of all
men with dementia were sexually active, as were 18 percent of women.
·
Among people with an
intimate partner, the majority of men (59 percent) and women (51 percent) with
dementia were sexually active. More than 40 percent of partnered men and women
ages 80 to 91 living with dementia were sexually active.
·
More than 1 in 10
people living with a partner reported feeling threatened or frightened by a
partner. This finding was similar among women and men and across different
levels of cognitive problems. Experts and guidelines call on physicians to
screen for elder abuse (the mistreatment of older people,
which can take many forms, including physical, emotional, and sexual abuse,
financial exploitation, and neglect), including sexual abuse, but definitions
of abuse and standards of consent for sex vary widely.
The researchers
estimate that, among people living at home who are aged 62 and older, at least
1.8 million men and 1.4 million women with suspected or diagnosed dementia are
sexually active. This number will more than double by 2050. However, rarely do
these people (especially women) receive a physician’s counseling about sexual
changes that may occur with dementia or other medical conditions.
The researchers
suggested that these findings can inform improved counseling, treatment, and
person-centered decision-making by physicians and other healthcare providers
caring for people with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.
Sexual activity is an
important aspect of human function throughout your lifetime, said the researchers.
They added that respectful care for older adults, including people with
cognitive impairments, requires an understanding of sexual norms and
problems—and effective strategies to manage sexual concerns with dignity.
This summary is
from “Sexuality and Cognitive Status: a U.S.
Nationally-Representative Study of Home-Dwelling Older Adults.”
It appears online ahead of print in the Journal of the American
Geriatrics Society. The study authors are Stacy Tessler
Lindau, MD, MAPP; William Dale, MD, PhD; Gillian Feldmeth, BS; Natalia
Gavrilova, PhD; Kenneth M. Langa, MD, PhD; Jennifer A. Makelarski, PhD, MPH;
and Kristen Wroblewski, MS.
No comments:
Post a Comment