Therapeutic Benefits of Caregiver Interventions

Similar documents
WE CAN DO BETTER: Helping People with Dementia and Their Families Live at Home with Quality of Life

WE CAN DO BETTER: Helping People with Dementia and Their Families Live at Home with Quality of Life

CRITICALLY APPRAISED PAPER (CAP)

Support for Family Caregivers in the Context of Dementia: Promising Programs & Implications for State Medicaid Policy

Caregiver Mediated Intervention. Trumps Pharmacotherapy for BPSD

BEHAVIORAL AND PSYCHOSOCIAL INTERVENTIONS FOR FAMILY CAREGIVERS

Scottish Pilot of the Tailored Activity Programme Progress to date. Jenny Reid AHP Dementia Consultant NHS

Evidence-Based Interventions to Improve Caregiver and Patient Outcomes in Dementia

CURRICULUM VITAE Part I. Year Degree Institution/Location Postdoctoral Research Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing.

Service Provision in Young-onset dementia: Towards an integrative approach in caregiving. Introduction F A

Neuropsychiatric Syndromes

Behavioral symptoms, a core clinical feature of dementia,

Frailty and relationship centred care in dementia

Jacqueline Wesson 24 May 2013

REACH II Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer s Caregiver Health

A Family Affair: Effects of Brain Injury on Family Dynamics

Aims for todays session

I-SEE-U. Dementia Care: A Framework to Identify and Support Caregivers at Risk. Elder Abuse Ontario Conference Nov. 4, 2015

Getting Help for Patients with Dementia and their Caregivers. Erica Salamida Associate Director of Programs and Services Alzheimer s Association-NENY

4/26/2012. Laura Grooms, MD Assistant Professor Geriatric Medicine Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine University of Louisville April 20, 2012

The REACH Caregiver Intervention Program: From Clinical Trial to Community Implementation. HRJ Endowed Chair University of Michigan

The American Cancer Society National Quality of Life Survey for Caregivers

Contested provocation: Making sense of the plight of family caregiving in dementia care and moving on

Over the past two decades, randomized controlled

Alzheimer s Disease and Related Disorders: The Public Health Call to Action

Cyclical Health Patterns in Alzheimer s Patients and Caregivers. Christopher Schneider. Research Project. Submitted to the School of Health Sciences

Effects of Dementia First Aid training on knowledge and attitude of family carers of people with Dementia: findings of a feasibility study

Psychosocial Intervention: Memory Clinics and Evidence Based Practice

Professor of Psychiatry Director, Program for Positive Aging

Dementia Carer s factsheet

Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) Intervention in the Community

Present by Dr Phuong Leung Dr Vasiliki Orgeta Professor Martin Orrell. Division of Psychiatry University College London

A teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School

RESEARCH SNAPSHOT. Disability Care-giving dynamics and futures planning among ageing parents of adult offspring with intellectual disability

Joel Sadavoy MD, FRCP, Founder Geriatric Psychiatry Professor of Psychiatry and Pencer Chair in Applied General Psychiatry, Director Reitman Centre

Dementia: Rethinking our approach to behaviour

Table 1. Baseline Battery Measures

Measuring health-related quality of life in persons with dementia DOMS results & recommendations

Dr Georgina Train Consultant Psychiatrist EMDASS service and Continuing Care.

Why Cognition Matters: Impact of Cognitive Impairment on Safety and Independent Living Skills

Mental Health Issues in Nursing Homes. I m glad you asked.

Counseling Clients With Late-Life Depression

Dementia Support Across the Care Continuum

Cognitive Training Interventions for Delaying Cognitive Decline

Effectiveness of Supporting Informal Caregivers of People with Dementia: A Systematic Review of Randomized and Non-Randomized Controlled Trials

Research into practice - practice into research: outreach work with people with dementia at Tyne & Wear Archives and Museums

American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc. Geriatric Psychiatry Core Competencies Outline

The Person: Dementia Basics

Spouse Caregivers and Dementia Relationships

CAP Lung Cancer Medical Writers Circle

Pain Rehabilitation Executive Program

Practical Approaches to Dementia Care - Wandering

Alzheimer s disease affects patients and their caregivers. experience employment complications,

Meeting the Palliative Care Needs of the Frail Elderly

MEDICAL PROVIDERS AND COMMUNITY AGENCIES

Caron Renaissance. Caron Renaissance

CRITICALLY APPRAISED PAPER (CAP)

Research & Policy Brief

Dementia and BME communities. Dr Mary Tilki Irish in Britain

Dr Sylvie Lambert, RN, PhD

The ABCs of Dementia Diagnosis

Psychological therapies for people with dementia who have associated depression [New 2015].

When the Diagnosis Is Dementia- What You Can Do? Howard Gruetzner, M.Ed., LPC Educational and Family Care Specialist North Central Texas Chapter

CANCER-RELATED BRAIN FOG. Angela Boudreau, RN, MN, CON(C) Odette Cancer Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

Literature Review of Dementia

Dementia Facts and Resources Dementia Warning Signs Getting a Diagnosis Dementia Communication Tips Dementia Risk Reduction.

The Investigation and Comparison of the underlying needs of common disruptive behaviors in patients with Alzheimer s disease

CHCS. Multimorbidity Pattern Analyses and Clinical Opportunities: Dementia. Center for Health Care Strategies, Inc. FACES OF MEDICAID DATA SERIES

Integrating Palliative and Oncology Care in Patients with Advanced Cancer

Non-Pharmacological Interventions for Persons With Dementia. John Erpenbach, CNP Michele Snyders, LCSW, ACHP-SW

Executive Functioning

12/6/2016. Objective PALLIATIVE CARE IN THE NURSING HOME. Medical Care in the US. Palliative Care

Why New Thinking is Needed for Older Adults across the Rehabilitation Continuum

Addressing Difficult Behaviors in Dementia

The Gerontological Society of America 64 th Annual Scientific Meeting Pre-Conference Workshop November 18 th 12:30 to 4:30

Assessment and management of behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia

Evaluations. Alzheimer s Disease A Public Health Response. Viewer Call-In. July 19, Guest Speakers. Thanks to our Sponsors:

Prevention, health promotion & early intervention in dementia

Seniors Helping Seniors September 7 & 12, 2016 Amy Abrams, MSW/MPH Education & Outreach Manager Alzheimer s San Diego

Dementia Basics. Welcome! What to expect and how to handle a dementia diagnosis. In partnership with Scripps Health.

The Zarit Burden Interview: A New Short Version and Screening Version

Outcome measures in dementia care research

How Aging and Dementia Effect Resident Behaviors

Thank You to our Sponsors: Evaluations & CE Credits. Featured Speakers. Conflict of Interest & Disclosure Statements 11/15/2016

A new direction for research: Clinician Family/Friend Caregiver Partnership as a Cornerstone of Dementia Palliative Care

CHRONIC DISEASE SELF- MANAGEMENT EDUCATION

Caregiving for an Individual with Dementia: Beginning the Journey

Information Gathering Obtaining history is the most critical first step Patient-provided history may not be reliable Need info from relatives, friends

Geriatric Alterations Associated with Neurological Conditions

Diversity and Dementia

Dementia Care In Singapore

Families Dealing with Dementia: Insights from Mainland China and Hong Kong

Promoting Excellence: A framework for all health and social services staff working with people with Dementia, their families and carers

Early Intervention the Key to Geriatric Assessment: Geriatric Assessment Outreach Teams

Community Based Occupational Therapy for people with dementia (COTiD) and their caregiver: evidence for applicability in Italy

Treatment of the elderly in the community Clalit Health Services Israel. Director of Geriatric and Chronic Diseases Department of Community Nursing

Efficacy of Interventions with Victims

Efficacy of Interventions with Victims

Rational Medication Use in Dementia

Psychosocial Problems In Reproductive Health Of Elders

Transcription:

Therapeutic Benefits of Caregiver Interventions Laura N. Gitlin, Ph.D. Professor, Department Community Public Health, School of Nursing Director, Center for Innovative Care in Aging Johns Hopkins University February 2, 2013 University of Hong Kong lgitlin1@jhu.edu

Overview Why care about caregivers? What do families do and need? Therapeutic benefits of caregiver interventions Implications for practice

Funding Sources Research funded by: National Institutes of Health Alzheimer s Association PA Dept. of Health, Tobacco Funds Rosalynn Carter Caregiver Institute/Johnson & Johnson Institute Administration on Aging Veterans Administration No disclosures/no sources of conflict

Why Care about Caregivers? Most persons with dementia live at home and are cared for by families throughout the duration of the disease Families responsible for monitoring symptoms, evaluating capacity, coordinating medical care and supportive services for persons with dementia Families at risk themselves for depression, poor health, dementia, mortality Financial and physical strain experienced by caregivers associated with nursing home placement Impact of caregivers on persons with dementia is substantial: Dysfunctional coping associated with higher mortality Closeness and quality relationship associated with better outcomes Being stressed or burdened associated with greater behavioral symptoms

Clinical Trajectory and Impact on Families Normal Pre- Clinical Mild Cognitive Impairment Early State Dementia Moderate Stage Dementia Severe Stage Dementia Care tasks: Coordination, planning ahead, Accompaniment to physician visits, Medication management, IADL assistance Care tasks: IADL and ADL assistance, Behavioral management Vigilance, Safety, Medical management Care tasks: IADL, ADL assistance, Behavioral management, Medical management Impact on Carers: Anxiety Burden Impact on Carers: Increased anxiety, fatigue, Depression, burden, loss of work, Complicated grief McKhann et al., 2011, Albert et al., 2011, Sperling et al, 2011 and Jack et al., May 2011 Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association

Unmet Needs of Persons with Dementia Living at Home (N=303) (Samus et al., Gerontological Meetings, 2012 Eval/Diagnosis Treat cognitive sx Treat neuropsych sx Behavior management Medication management Medication administration General Medical/Health care Allied Health care Safety ADL Assistance Meaningful Activities Legal Issues/ Care Planning Health Insurance Patient Education Caregiver Availability 14% 16% 21% 19% 23% 18% 25% 9% 21% 3% 35% 47% 51% 63% 90% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Caregiver Unmet Needs (n=289) Samus et al., Gerontological Meetings, 2012 Caregiver education 84 % Resource referral 88 % Caregiver mental health 45 % Caregiver medical health 24 % Other 6 % 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Impact of Unmet Needs >Unmet needs associated with >depressive scores (p=0.002) and lower self-rated (p<0.001) quality of life for patients >Unmet needs associated with >caregiver depression (p<0.001) and lower caregiver QOL (p<0.001) Samus et al., 2011 Gerontological Society of America presentation

Therapeutic Benefits of Caregiver Interventions

Hypothetical Model of Caregiver as Therapeutic Agent Well-being Caregiver Outcomes Patient Outcomes -Disease etiology -Disease Stage -Physical Health -Cognitive Abilities -Cognitive Deficits -Care setting Caregiver interventions -Mood -Quality of life -Efficacy -Skills -Coping/burden -Physical health -Mood -Behaviors -Quality of life -Function -Social engagement -Physical health -Support network Care relationship Education Counseling Family counseling Depression treatment Skills training

Strong Evidence from Large RCTs Counseling/on-going support for white spouse caregivers (N=406) (Mittelman et al., Int Psychogeriatr 2000, 2004 etc) Reduced spousal caregiver upset Over time, decline in patient institutionalization rate No effect on behavioral frequency/severity Behavioral management, education, support for Hispanic, African American and White Caregivers (N=642) (NIA/NINR REACH II multi-site study Belle et al., Annals of Internal Medicine, 2006) Improved caregiver well-being (Whites, Hispanics, Spouse African Americans) Reduced upset with behavioral symptoms Perceived improvement in behaviors

8 Recent Systematic Reviews of Nonpharmacologic Caregiver Intervention Studies (2007-2012) Effect sizes are small but caregiver benefits include: Lower perceived burden Lower depression Higher sense of competence Improved coping skills Effect for persons with dementia not always considered Effect sizes for caregivers vary by gender, care relationship Few studies report cost or cost effectiveness Modest benefit of information-based services for neuropsychiatric symptoms and quality of life in people with dementia but no effects on caregiver burden Few interventions culturally tailored to Hispanic/Latino caregivers from differing subcultures Interventions with a dual focus (patient/caregiver) may improve some but not all aspects of functioning for both parties Gitlin & Hodgson in press, Caregivers as Therapeutic Agents in Evidence Based Dementia Practice

Meta-analysis of Generalized All-purpose Caregiver Interventions to Improve Behaviors 23 randomized clinical trials of caregiver support interventions 3,279 community-dwelling caregivers and their family members with dementia Outcomes: Person with Dementia - Significant treatment effects for reduction of behavioral symptoms effect size = 0.34 (95% CI: 0.20 0.48, Z = 4.87; p<0.01) Caregiver negative reactions reduced: effect size = 0.15 (95% CI: 0.04 0.26, Z = 2.76; p=0.006) Brodaty et al., Sept. 2012. American Journal of Psychiatry; Gitlin, Editorial, Sept. 2012 AJP

Select Outcomes from Recent RCTs

Environmental Skill-building Program (Skills2CareTM) (NIH REACH I N = 255) Person-environment fit framework 6 to 8 home sessions by occupational therapist Identification of caregiver concerns (3 to 5 concerns) Problem solving with caregiver Environmental and task simplification Use of visual cues Decluttering Set up daily routines Simplify tasks Stress reduction Education about disease and communication strategies Gitlin, et al., (2003).The Gerontologist

Benefits to Persons with Dementia Reduced functional dependence Enhanced engagement Enhanced quality of life Gitlin, et al., (2005). Maintenance of effects of the home environmental skill- building program for family caregivers and individuals with Alzheimer s disease and related disorders. Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences, 60A(3), 368-374; Gitlin, et al., (2001). A randomized, controlled trial of a home environmental intervention: Effect on efficacy and upset in caregivers and on daily function of persons with dementia. The Gerontologist, 41, 4-14.

5 Number of Memory-Related Behaviors N=127 Treatment Group p=.019 b CI =.99,.02 4.5 a CI = -.92, -.09 Control group 4 Baseline 6 Months 12 Months Gitlin et al., 2005, J. of Gerontology, Medical Sciences

Benefits to Family Caregivers Enhanced: Skills to use effective communications Skills using simplification strategies Confidence managing day-to-day Well-being (particularly for spouses and women) Reduced: Upset with behaviors Burden and depression Time spent on duty (for male caregivers) Gitlin, et al. (2003). Effects of the Home Environmental Skill-building Program on the Caregiver- Care Recipient Dyad: Six-month Outcomes from the Philadelphia REACH Initiative. The Gerontologist, 43(4), 532-546; Gitlin, et al., (2001). A randomized, controlled trial of a home environmental intervention: Effect on efficacy and upset in caregivers and on daily function of persons with dementia. The Gerontologist, 41, 4-14.

Caregiver Upset with Behavioral Symptoms (N = 255) 5.8 5.6 5.4 5.2 5.0 4.8 4.6 (p=.027) Usual Care Experimental 4.4 Baseline Six Months RMBPC items: repetitive questions, forgetting day/recent events, difficulty concentrating, not finishing tasks, losing things

Funded by NIA/NINR Gitlin et al., 2007 Clinical Interventions in Aging Gitlin et al., 2010 Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

Model for Understanding Behavioral Symptoms Caregiver Communication (yelling, harsh, negative tone, blaming) Expectations too high Stress level Poor Health Rushes, no predictable routines Poor relationship Ineffective coping style Individual with Dementia Behavioral symptoms Underlying medical conditions Executive dysfunctions Poor sleep Pain Dehydration Disengagement Risk of falls Fear, loss of control, meaning Physical Environment Clutter Noisy Visual cues Complexity Under/over stimulating Activities too complex

PROJECT ACT STUDY DESIGN (N=272) 2 weeks 72 hours Recruitment Screening Baseline Assessment (N = 272) Randomization gender/relationship 2 weeks 4 Months Post Baseline 6 Months Post Baseline Treatment (N=137) Follow-up Assessment 1 Follow-up Assessment 2 Control (N=135) Follow-up Assessment 1 Follow-up Assessment 2 Workshop

ACT Sample (N = 272) Caregivers Average age = 66.3 70% White; 30% African American 82% Female 51% Spouse 67% > HS education Average of 4 years caregiving Persons with Dementia Average age = 82 53% male MMSE = 13 Average of 10 behavioral symptoms

Nurse Medical Assessment and Caregiver Education Review patient s medical issues Provide caregiver education about: Pain Dehydration Infection Constipation Polypharmacy Work with caregiver how to take care of themselves

Collect blood and urine specimens from patient Perform physical exam of patient Conduct telephone follow up with caregiver to discuss test results If medical problem, refer caregiver to physician Follow-up (one week later) with caregiver to determine if physician appointment obtained and resolution (action taken by physician) Medical Assessment

9 Visits by Occupational Therapist: Problem Solving Process Identify the behavior Identify antecedents or triggers Consider consequences Brainstorm strategies Implement strategies Evaluate strategy effectiveness

Providing Caregivers Skills ACTION PLAN Simplify: 1. Environment 2. Tasks 3. Activities 4. Communications Customized Action Plan utilizing four types of strategies Basic education about dementia Methods for stress reduction

Project ACT (N=272) Effect on Family Caregivers at 4 Months Emotional Well-being: Improved Mood (p =.001) Decreased depressive symptoms (p=.045) Decreased upset with behaviors (p =.001) Decreased subjective burden (p =.044) Caregiver Skills: Confidence managing behaviors (p =.007) Decline in negative communications (p =.009) Improved management skills (p =.001) Gitlin, et al., (2010). Targeting and managing behavioral symptoms in individuals with dementia: A randomized trial of a nonpharmacological intervention. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 58 (6) 1465-1474.

Reduction in Targeted Behavior of Person with Dementia 70 60 p=.002 50 40 30 20 ACT Control Group 10 0 Got Worse Stayed same Got better

Undiagnosed Medical Conditions Undiagnosed acute illnesses occurred in 44 (35%) of 124 individuals with dementia Most prevalent conditions: Bacteriuria (20%) Hyperglycemia (7%) Anemia (5%) Of 44 persons with detected medical issue: 40 (91%) caregivers followed up with physician Of 40, 3 physicians did not treat because patients had asymptomatic bateriuria Gitlin et al., in press, JAGS; Hodgson, Gitlin et al., in press, Alz. Disease and Related Disorders

Implications for Practice

Characteristics of Effective Caregiver Interventions Education and support alone are not effective Effects of multi-component interventions, counseling, respite etc are domain specific: Interventions effectively improve some aspects of caregiver wellbeing or some aspects of well-being of the person with dementia that are being targeted but not everything Multi-component interventions more effective vs. singular Psychosocial support critical element Tailoring to family caregiver needs, care preferences, values Address multiple needs Interventions requiring active caregiver participation have broadest effects Zarit and Femia, AJN, 2008, vol 109

Clinical Trajectory and Impact on Families Normal Pre- Clinical Mild Cognitive Impairment Early State Dementia Moderate Stage Dementia Severe Stage Dementia Care tasks: Coordination, planning ahead, Accompaniment to physician visits, Medication management, IADL assistance Care tasks: IADL and ADL assistance, Behavioral management Vigilance, Safety and medical monitoring Care tasks: IADL, ADL assistance, Behavioral management, Medical management Anxiety Burden Increased anxiety, fatigue, Depression, burden, loss of work, Complicated grief Comprehensive care for families across disease stage that addresses changing needs of caregiver and persons with dementia and involve on-going needs assessment, multi-components, and tailoring. McKhann et al., 2011, Albert et al., 2011, Sperling et al, 2011 and Jack et al., May 2011 Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association

Challenges for Involving Caregivers as Therapeutic Agent Paradigm shift from focus only on person with dementia to family unit and coordination across disease trajectory Integrate assessment of caregiver needs within clinical settings Financial support for health professional involvement with caregiver education, skills training and support Cost and cost effectiveness lacking We have strong evidence-based caregiver interventions but more research needed to: Match diverse families with best intervention approaches Identify effective interventions for each disease stage Determine how to implement evidence from RCTs into practice settings

Recommendations from WHO 2012 Report Countries should develop integrated and coordinated health and social pathways and services to cater for the changing needs of people with dementia and their caregivers Greater community support, including respite options, will assist families to care for people with dementia for longer in community and will delay or reduce reliance on high-cost residential care. In resource-poor settings, a focus on community outreach could be an efficient use of scarce resources to improve the quality of life of people with dementia and their caregivers.