# Characterization of Delirium and Its Severity Across Three Distinct Clinical Settings

**Authors:** Jason Albaum, Tamara Fong, Richard Jones, Sharon Inouye

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3895 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study examines how delirium and its severity vary across different clinical settings, particularly in older adults with dementia.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into delirium severity patterns in settings with varying dementia prevalence.

## Key findings

- Delirium severity was highest in skilled nursing facilities (median CAM-S score 8) compared to other settings.
- Dementia prevalence was associated with higher delirium severity scores, though chronic cognitive symptoms may also influence these scores.
- Delirium rates and severity varied significantly across the three clinical settings studied.

## Abstract

Delirium and its severity (i.e., the intensity or degree of delirium symptoms) can be difficult to measure in people with dementia due to substantial overlap in symptoms and clinical features, complicating both diagnosis and research. In this descriptive study, we used data from the Better Assessment of Illness II (BASIL II) study of adults aged ≥70 years recruited from medical inpatient (Site 1), inpatient elective surgery (Site 2), or skilled nursing facility (Site 3) settings, to characterize delirium and its severity in settings with varying dementia prevalence. Trained staff conducted patient and proxy interviews, chart review, and delirium assessments at baseline and 1-2 days after acute illness or surgery using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM; delirium present/absent) and CAM-Severity (CAM-S; scored 0-19, 19 = worst). Among 488 participants (mean [SD] age 79 [6] years; 58% female; 75% white), dementia prevalence was 23% (Site 1), 11% (Site 2), and 83% (Site 3). Following acute illness or surgery, the proportion meeting criteria for delirium and median (IQR) CAM-S scores among those with delirium were: Site 1, 50%, score 6 (4-6); Site 2, 1%, score 3 (3-3); Site 3, 24%, score 8 (6-10). Delirium rates and severity showed different patterns of variation across settings. Dementia prevalence may be associated with greater delirium severity; however, it is possible that chronic cognitive symptoms may also elevate delirium severity scores. These findings underscore the pressing need for studies validating measures of delirium severity in populations with dementia to advance research and patient care.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627), delirium (MONDO:0045057)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763644