Severe cognitive impairment


Severe cognitive impairment is a form of cognitive impairment that can be distinguished from the "mild" and "moderate" types of impairment. In the United States, the existence of severe cognitive impairment is a condition that triggers benefit payments under most long-term care insurance policies.

Definition

Under the United States' Federal Long Term Care Insurance Program, a severe cognitive impairment is defined as "a deterioration or loss in intellectual capacity that places a person in jeopardy of harming him or herself or others and, therefore, the person requires substantial supervision by another person; and is measured by clinical evidence and standardized tests which reliably measure impairment in: short or long term memory; orientation to people, places or time; and deductive or abstract reasoning."
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offer the general explanation that a cognitive impairment exists when a person "has trouble remembering, learning new things, concentrating, or making decisions that affect their everyday life". It goes on the say that the impairment is severe when the person " the ability to understand the meaning or importance of something and the ability to talk or write". According to their explanation, people with severe cognitive impairment are unable to live independently.

Prevalence

In a 2013 study conducted at a hospital in Tirupati, 3 out of 526 out-patients were determined to have severe cognitive impairment. A 2013–2014 study conducted at nursing homes in Sweden found that approximately one in seven residents suffered from that condition.