| Literature DB >> 22269343 |
Hilde Verbeek1, Gabriele Meyer, Helena Leino-Kilpi, Adelaida Zabalegui, Ingalill Rahm Hallberg, Kai Saks, Maria Eugenia Soto, David Challis, Dirk Sauerland, Jan P H Hamers.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health care policies in many countries aim to enable people with dementia to live in their own homes as long as possible. However, at some point during the disease the needs of a significant number of people with dementia cannot be appropriately met at home and institutional care is required. Evidence as to best practice strategies enabling people with dementia to live at home as long as possible and also identifying the right time to trigger admission to a long-term nursing care facility is therefore urgently required. The current paper presents the rationale and methods of a study generating primary data for best-practice development in the transition from home towards institutional nursing care for people with dementia and their informal caregivers. The study has two main objectives: 1) investigate country-specific factors influencing institutionalization and 2) investigate the circumstances of people with dementia and their informal caregivers in eight European countries. Additionally, data for economic evaluation purposes are being collected. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22269343 PMCID: PMC3328268 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-68
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Overview the European project 'RightTimePlaceCare. * Work Package (WP) leaders are mentioned in brackets; DE = Germany; SE = Sweden; NL = Netherlands; ES = Spain; EE = Estonia; † WP2 aims to describe and analyze European health, social and welfare structures and explores intersectorial communication; ‡ WP3 is described in the current study protocol; § WP4 aims to analyze cost-benefit ratio of services for relevant stakeholders; WP5 aims to develop best-practice strategies and to deliver meaningful and feasible recommendations for future dementia care; ¦. WP6 aims to develop and apply dissemination and implementation strategies of the RTPC project.
Study design
| (day -14 to -1) | (day 0) | (day 80 to 100) | |
| Informed Consent | Baseline assessment | Follow up assessment | |
| Informed Consent | Baseline assessment | Follow up assessment | |
Measurement instruments
| Variable | Measure | No of items (range*) | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographics | Dataheet | n/a | IC and MR |
| Comorbidity | Charlson index | n/a | MR |
| Cognition | MMSE | 20 (0- | People with dementia |
| Behavior | NPI-Q | 12 ( | Proxy† |
| ADL | KATZ | 6 ( | Proxy |
| Personal and social resources | RUD | n/a | Proxy |
| Quality of care indicators | Proxy | ||
| -nutritional status | Item on weight loss | 1 (yes/ | Proxy |
| -physical restraints | 8 items from MAQ | n/a | Proxy |
| -pain | MDS based indicators. Presence, frequency, intensity and location. | n/a | Proxy |
| -pressure ulcer | Presence, intensity | n/a | Proxy |
| -mortality rate | Register mortality | n/a | Proxy |
| -mood disturbances/depression | CSDD | 19 ( | Proxy |
| -falls | Frequency and injuries recent falls | n/a | Proxy |
| Quality of Life | QoL-AD‡ | 13 (13- | Self-and Proxy |
| Positive and negative aspects of caregiving | CRA | 24 (5 dimensions) | IC |
| Caregivers burden | ZBI | 22 ( | IC |
| Availability of resources | RUD | n/a | IC |
| Psychological well-being | GHQ-12 | 12 ( | IC |
| Quality of Life informal caregivers | EQ-5D | 5 (n/a) | IC |
| Experiences on QoC | 9 items of the CLINT | n/a | IC |
| open ended questions | n/a | IC | |
| Resource use | RUD | n/a | IC and Proxy |
* the underlined score represents the most favorable score; † at home: informal caregiver; institutional nursing care: formal caregiver; ‡ If a PwD total score is less than 3 on the MMSE, Qol--AD will be assessed only using proxy reports