Enhancing Dementia Awareness and Screening, and Reducing Stigmatizing Attitudes towards Dementia in Urban China: The Role of Opinion Leader Intervention in Community-Dwelling Older Adults
- PMID: 40352060
- PMCID: PMC12059793
- DOI: 10.31083/AP38857
Enhancing Dementia Awareness and Screening, and Reducing Stigmatizing Attitudes towards Dementia in Urban China: The Role of Opinion Leader Intervention in Community-Dwelling Older Adults
Abstract
Background: Dementia in China is increasingly burdensome yet remains underrecognized and undertreated due to low awareness and persistent stigma. Community-based strategies are urgently needed to address these barriers. By using real-world data from an 18-month dementia campaign in Wuhan, we retrospectively evaluated the feasibility and efficacy of opinion leader intervention (OLI), a novel, community-driven approach, in improving dementia knowledge, reducing stigma, and promoting screening among older urban adults.
Methods: Starting in August 2023, a three-phase campaign was launched, targeting 3550 residents aged ≥60 years in the Jiangdijie community, Wuhan. The pre-intervention phase (6 months) included monthly expert-led dementia education lectures at a senior center (30-60 attendees/session). The traditional intervention phase (next 6 months) involved distributing brochures in public areas and doubling lecture frequency. The final OLI phase (6 months) engaged 19 trained opinion leaders to disseminate knowledge, encourage screening, and model preventive behaviors during daily interactions. Free dementia screening was available throughout the campaign. Outcomes-dementia knowledge scores, stigma-related attitude scores, and screening participation rates-were assessed via samples randomly drawn from the elderly residents at the end of each phase (T0: n = 100, T1: n = 117, T2: n = 100).
Results: Dementia knowledge scores among older adults increased from 12.27 (T0) to 13.51 (T1), with a significant jump to 17.63 post-OLI (T2 vs T1, p < 0.001). Stigmatizing attitudes scores improved from 2.11 (T0) to 2.43 (T1), rising further to 2.98 at T2 (T2 vs T1, p = 0.010). Participation rates in dementia screening rose from 18.0% (T0) to 23.9% (T1), surging to 46.0% post-OLI (T2 vs T1, p < 0.001).
Conclusions: The OLI was associated with marked improvements in dementia knowledge, reduced stigma, and higher screening uptake compared with traditional health education methods. These findings highlight OLI's potential as a feasible strategy to enhance dementia awareness and care in Chinese urban communities.
Keywords: dementia awareness; older adults; opinion leader; screening; stigmatizing attitudes.
Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s). Published by IMR Press.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest. Bao-Liang Zhong is serving as one of the Editorial Board members. We declare that Bao-Liang Zhong had no involvement in the peer review of this article and has no access to information regarding its peer review. Full responsibility for the editorial process for this article was delegated to Woojae Myung.
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