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Dive into the research topics where J. R. M. Copeland is active.

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Featured researches published by J. R. M. Copeland.


Psychological Medicine | 1976

A semi-structured clinical interview for the assessment of diagnosis and mental state in the elderly: the Geriatric Mental State Schedule: I. Development and reliability

J. R. M. Copeland; M. J. Kelleher; J. M. Kellett; A. J. Gourlay; Barry J. Gurland; Joseph L. Fleiss; L. Sharpe

A standardized, semi-structured interview for examining and recording the mental state in elderly subjects is described. It allows the classification of patients by symptom profile and can demonstrate changes in that profile over time. It is believed that good reliability is demonstrated between psychiatric raters both for psychiatric diagnosis made on the basis of the schedule findings and for individual items. The Geriatric Mental State Schedule (GMS) consists mainly of items from the eighth edition of the PSE (Wing et al. 1967), together with additional items from the PSS (Spitzer et al. 1964), and extra sections dealing with disorientation and other cognitive abnormalities. Modifications have been introduced to facilitate interviewing elderly subjects.


Neurology | 1999

Rates and risk factors for dementia and Alzheimer’s disease Results from EURODEM pooled analyses

Lenore J. Launer; K. Andersen; Michael Dewey; Luc Letenneur; Alewijn Ott; L. A. Amaducci; Carol Brayne; J. R. M. Copeland; J.-F. Dartigues; P. Kragh-Sorensen; Antonio Lobo; J. Martinez-Lage; T. Stijnen; A. Hofman

Objective: To investigate the risk of AD associated with a family history of dementia, female gender, low levels of education, smoking, and head trauma. Background: These putative factors have been identified in cross-sectional studies. However, those studies are prone to bias due to systematic differences between patients and control subjects regarding survival and how risk factors are recalled. Methods: The authors performed a pooled analysis of four European population-based prospective studies of individuals 65 years and older, with 528 incident dementia patients and 28,768 person-years of follow-up. Patients were detected by screening the total cohort with brief cognitive tests, followed by a diagnostic assessment of those who failed the screening tests. Dementia was diagnosed with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disrders, 3rd ed. (revised), and AD was diagnosed according to National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke–Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Association criteria. Incident rates and relative risk (95% CI) express the association of a risk factor for dementia. Results: Incident rates for dementia and AD were similar across studies. The incidence of AD increased with age. At 90 years of age and older the incidence was 63.5 (95% CI, 49.7 to 81.0) per 1,000 person-years. Female gender, current smoking (more strongly in men), and low levels of education (more strongly in women) increased the risk of AD significantly. A history of head trauma with unconsciousness and family history of dementia did not increase risk significantly. Conclusion: Contrary to previous reports, head trauma was not a risk factor for AD, and smoking did not protect against AD. The association of family history with the risk of AD is weaker than previously estimated on the basis of cross-sectional studies. Female gender may modify the risk of AD, whether it be via biological or behavioral factors.


Neurology | 1999

Gender differences in the incidence of AD and vascular dementia: The EURODEM Studies

K. Andersen; Lenore J. Launer; Michael Dewey; Luc Letenneur; Alewijn Ott; J. R. M. Copeland; J.-F. Dartigues; P. Kragh-Sorensen; M. Baldereschi; Carol Brayne; Antonio Lobo; J. Martinez-Lage; T. Stijnen; A. Hofman

Objective: To study the difference in risk for dementing diseases between men and women. Background: Previous studies suggest women have a higher risk for dementia than men. However, these studies include small sample sizes, particularly in the older age groups, when the incidence of dementia is highest. Methods: Pooled analysis of four population-based prospective cohort studies was performed. The sample included persons 65 years and older, 528 incident cases of dementia, and 28,768 person-years of follow-up. Incident cases were identified in a two-stage procedure in which the total cohort was screened for cognitive impairment, and screen positives underwent detailed diagnostic assessment. Dementia and main subtypes of AD and vascular dementia were diagnosed according to internationally accepted guidelines. Sex- and age-specific incidence rates, and relative and cumulative risks for total dementia, AD, and vascular dementia were calculated using log linear analysis and Poisson regression. Results: There were significant gender differences in the incidence of AD after age 85 years. At 90 years of age, the rate was 81.7 (95% CI, 63.8 to 104.7) in women and 24.0 (95% CI, 10.3 to 55.6) in men. There were no gender differences in rates or risk for vascular dementia. The cumulative risk for 65-year-old women to develop AD at the age of 95 years was 0.22 compared with 0.09 for men. The cumulative risk for developing vascular dementia at the age of 95 years was similar for men and women (0.04). Conclusion: Compared with men, women have an increased risk for AD. There are no gender differences in risk for vascular dementia.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1992

Risk factors for depression in elderly people: a prospective study

B. H. Green; J. R. M. Copeland; Michael E. Dewey; Vimal Sharma; P.A. Saunders; Ian A. Davidson; Caroline Sullivan; C. McWilliam

In 1982‐1983 a random sample of 1486 people aged 65 years and above was generated from general practitioner lists; 1070 were interviewed in the community using the Geriatric Mental State and a Social History questionnaire. The cohort was followed up by interview 3 years later. At year 3 the diagnostic computer program AGECAT diagnosed 44 incident cases of depression. Information from the depressed groups initial and further interviews was compared with a control group (which excluded cases of affective or organic mental illness). Univariate analysis yielded three factors that were significantly associated with the development of depression 3 years later: a lack of satisfaction with life; feelings of loneliness; and smoking. Multivariate analysis confirmed their independent effects and revealed 2 further factors attaining significance: female gender and a trigger factor, bereavement of a close figure within 6 months of the third‐year diagnosis. Some other factors traditionally associated with depression, such as poor housing, marital status and living alone, failed to attain significance as risk factors.


Neurology | 2004

Effect of smoking on global cognitive function in nondemented elderly

Alewijn Ott; K. Andersen; Michael Dewey; Luc Letenneur; Carol Brayne; J. R. M. Copeland; Jean-François Dartigues; P. Kragh-Sorensen; Antonio Lobo; J. Martinez-Lage; T. Stijnen; A. Hofman; Lenore J. Launer

Background: Contrary to early case-control studies that suggested smoking protects against Alzheimer disease (AD), recent prospective studies have shown that elderly who smoke may be at increased risk for dementia. Objective: To examine prospectively the effect of smoking on cognition in nondemented elderly. Method: In a multicenter cohort, the European Community Concerted Action Epidemiology of Dementia (EURODEM), including the Odense, Personnes Agées Quid (Paquid), Rotterdam, and Medical Research Council: Ageing in Liverpool Project—Health Aspects (MRC ALPHA) Studies, 17,610 persons aged 65 and over were screened and examined for dementia. After an average 2.3 years of follow-up, 11,003 nondemented participants were retested. Excluding incident dementia cases and those without baseline information on smoking gave an analytical sample of 9,209 persons. Average yearly decline in Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score was compared among groups, adjusting for age, sex, baseline MMSE, education, type of residence, and history of myocardial infarction or stroke. Results: MMSE score of persons who never smoked on average declined 0.03 point/year. The adjusted decline of former smokers was 0.03 point greater and of current smokers 0.13 point greater than never smokers (p < 0.001). Higher rates of decline by smoking were found in men and women, persons with and without family history of dementia, and in three of four participating studies. Higher cigarette pack–year exposure was correlated with a significantly higher rate of decline. Conclusion: Smoking may accelerate cognitive decline in nondemented elderly.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 1997

PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TREATMENT TRIAL OF DEPRESSION IN ELDERLY PHYSICALLY ILL PATIENTS

Mavis Evans; Margaret F. Hammond; Kenneth Wilson; Michael Lye; J. R. M. Copeland

Objectives. To determine the response of physically ill elderly depressed patients to treatment.


Psychological Medicine | 1976

A semi-structured clinical interview for the assessment of diagnosis and mental state in the elderly: the Geriatric Mental State Schedule: II. A factor analysis

Barry J. Gurland; Joseph L. Fleiss; K. Goldberg; L. Sharpe; J. R. M. Copeland; M. J. Kelleher; J. M. Kellett

One hundred geriatric psychiatric patients were examined with the Geriatric Mental State Schedule in New York and London, and a correlation procedure involving both clinical and statistical operations was carried out on the psychopathological data thus collected. Twenty-one factors were produced, including three dealing with cognitive impairment. Although it was found that elderly depressives show a profile of psychopathology quite different from that shown by patients with organic disorder, it was also found that patients with an apparently functional disorder may sometimes be diagnosed as an organic disorder, that subjective complaints of intellectual impairment are not good indicators of organic disorders, and may be associated with a depressive factor, and that complaints that could be dismissed as attributes of aging may actually be indicative of a depressive disorder in the elderly. The methodological implications, as well as the limitations of the sample size, are discussed.


Psychological Medicine | 2001

Religion as a cross-cultural determinant of depression in elderly Europeans: results from the EURODEP collaboration

Arjan W. Braam; P. van den Eeden; Martin Prince; Aartjan T.F. Beekman; Sirkka-Liisa Kivelä; Brian A. Lawlor; Andreas Birkhofer; Rebecca Fuhrer; Anthony Lobo; Hallgrímur Magnússon; Anthony Mann; I. Meller; Marc Roelands; Ingmar Skoog; Cesare Turrina; J. R. M. Copeland

BACKGROUND The protective effects of religion against late life depression may depend on the broader sociocultural environment. This paper examines whether the prevailing religious climate is related to cross-cultural differences of depression in elderly Europeans. METHODS Two approaches were employed, using data from the EURODEP collaboration. First, associations were studied between church-attendance, religious denomination and depression at the syndrome level for six EURODEP study centres (five countries, N = 8398). Secondly, ecological associations were computed by multi-level analysis between national estimates of religious climate, derived from the European Value Survey and depressive symptoms, for the pooled dataset of 13 EURODEP study centres (11 countries, N = 17,739). RESULTS In the first study, depression rates were lower among regular church-attenders, most prominently among Roman Catholics. In the second study, fewer depressive symptoms were found among the female elderly in countries, generally Roman Catholic, with high rates of regular church-attendance. Higher levels of depressive symptoms were found among the male elderly in Protestant countries. CONCLUSIONS Religious practice is associated with less depression in elderly Europeans, both on the individual and the national level. Religious practice, especially when it is embedded within a traditional value-orientation, may facilitate coping with adversity in later life.


BMC Public Health | 2008

The 10/66 Dementia Research Group's fully operationalised DSM-IV dementia computerized diagnostic algorithm, compared with the 10/66 dementia algorithm and a clinician diagnosis: a population validation study

Martin Prince; Juan Llibre de Rodriguez; L Noriega; Alcides López; Daisy Acosta; Emiliano Albanese; Raul L. Arizaga; J. R. M. Copeland; Michael Dewey; Cleusa P. Ferri; Mariella Guerra; Yueqin Huang; Ks Jacob; Ennapadam S. Krishnamoorthy; Paul McKeigue; Renata M Sousa; Robert Stewart; Aquiles Salas; Ana Luisa Sosa; Richard Uwakwa

BackgroundThe criterion for dementia implicit in DSM-IV is widely used in research but not fully operationalised. The 10/66 Dementia Research Group sought to do this using assessments from their one phase dementia diagnostic research interview, and to validate the resulting algorithm in a population-based study in Cuba.MethodsThe criterion was operationalised as a computerised algorithm, applying clinical principles, based upon the 10/66 cognitive tests, clinical interview and informant reports; the Community Screening Instrument for Dementia, the CERAD 10 word list learning and animal naming tests, the Geriatric Mental State, and the History and Aetiology Schedule – Dementia Diagnosis and Subtype. This was validated in Cuba against a local clinician DSM-IV diagnosis and the 10/66 dementia diagnosis (originally calibrated probabilistically against clinician DSM-IV diagnoses in the 10/66 pilot study).ResultsThe DSM-IV sub-criteria were plausibly distributed among clinically diagnosed dementia cases and controls. The clinician diagnoses agreed better with 10/66 dementia diagnosis than with the more conservative computerized DSM-IV algorithm. The DSM-IV algorithm was particularly likely to miss less severe dementia cases. Those with a 10/66 dementia diagnosis who did not meet the DSM-IV criterion were less cognitively and functionally impaired compared with the DSMIV confirmed cases, but still grossly impaired compared with those free of dementia.ConclusionThe DSM-IV criterion, strictly applied, defines a narrow category of unambiguous dementia characterized by marked impairment. It may be specific but incompletely sensitive to clinically relevant cases. The 10/66 dementia diagnosis defines a broader category that may be more sensitive, identifying genuine cases beyond those defined by our DSM-IV algorithm, with relevance to the estimation of the population burden of this disorder.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2008

Severity of depression and risk for subsequent dementia: cohort studies in China and the UK

Ruoling Chen; Zhi Hu; Li Wei; Xia Qin; Cherie McCracken; J. R. M. Copeland

BACKGROUND Depression and dementia often exist concurrently. The associations of depressive syndromes and severity of depression with incident dementia have been little studied. AIMS To determine the effects of depressive syndromes and cases of depression on the risk of incident dementia. METHOD Participants in China and the UK aged > or =65 years without dementia were interviewed using the Geriatric Mental State interview and re-interviewed 1 year later in 1254 Chinese, and 2 and 4 years later in 3341 and 2157 British participants respectively (Ageing in Liverpool Project Health Aspects: part of the Medical Research Council - Cognitive Function and Ageing study). RESULTS Incident dementia was associated with only the most severe depressive syndromes in both Chinese and British participants. The risk of dementia increased, not in the less severe cases of depression but in the most severe cases. The multiple adjusted hazard ratio (HR)=5.44 (95% CI 1.67-17.8) for Chinese participants at 1-year follow-up, and HR=2.47 (95% CI 1.25-4.89) and HR=2.62 (95% CI 1.18-5.80) for British participants at 2- and 4-year follow-up respectively. The effect was greater in younger participants. CONCLUSIONS Only the most severe syndromes and cases of depression are a risk factor for dementia.

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Vimal Sharma

University of Liverpool

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Ruoling Chen

University of Wolverhampton

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Murali Krishna

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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Carol Brayne

University of Cambridge

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