Mortality and its predictors among people with dementia receiving psychiatric in-patient care

  • Marguet O
  • Chen S
  • Sidhom E
  • et al.
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Abstract

Background: Although dementia is a terminal condition, palliation can be a challenge for clinical services. As dementia progresses, people frequently develop behavioural and psychological symptoms, sometimes so severe they require care in specialist dementia mental health wards. Although these are often a marker of late disease, there has been little research on the mortality of people admitted to these wards. Aims: We sought to describe the mortality of this group, both on-ward and after discharge, and to investigate clinical features predicting 1-year mortality. Method: First, we conducted a retrospective analysis of 576 people with dementia admitted to the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust dementia wards over an 8-year period. We attempted to identify predictors of mortality and build predictive machine learning models. To investigate deaths occurring during admission, we conducted a second analysis as a retrospective service evaluation

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Marguet, O. E., Chen, S., Sidhom, E., Wolverson, E., Russell, G., Crowther, G., … Underwood, B. R. (2025). Mortality and its predictors among people with dementia receiving psychiatric in-patient care. BJPsych Open, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2025.40

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