| Literature DB >> 23577637 |
Jenny T van der Steen1, Bregje D Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Dirk L Knol, Miel W Ribbe, Luc Deliens.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with dementia frequently do not receive adequate palliative care which may relate to poor understanding of the natural course of dementia. We hypothesized that understanding that dementia is a progressive and terminal disease is fundamental to a focus on comfort in dementia, and examined how family and professional caregivers' understanding of the nature of the disease was associated with patients' comfort during the dying process.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23577637 PMCID: PMC3648449 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-11-105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Framework guiding analyses. aReferring to the assessment at eight weeks after admission, or ((3), (4) and (7)) the period between admission and eight weeks after admission. bMid-way study, for proximity to family assessment throughout the data collection period, or, for newly employed physicians, soon after being employed. cPossible mediators (a) and (b) are factors related to (more balanced) families’ decision making as described by the theoretical model of Caron et al.[5].
Possible mediators and associations between perception of dementia and patient comfort when dying (EOLD-CAD)
| Family indicates being critical considering care for resident (3 categories; family, baseline) | 0.40 | 0.03, interaction 0.08 |
| Preference for decision making on care and treatment (family, baseline) | | |
| - family prefers to decide him/herself versus physician, or shared | 0.39 | 0.96, interaction 0.08 |
| - family prefers to leave decisions to the treating physicians, versus self or shared | 0.24 | 0.89, interaction 0.10 |
| Family’s degree of confidence that understood what patient would and would not have wanted with respect to his/her health care and treatment (three categories, family, after death) | 0.37 | 0.17, interaction 0.01 |
| Families’ evaluation of quality of the relationship with patient in terms of intensity and how warm before the patient’s dementia (five categories, family, baseline)b (Mediator) | 0.046 | 0.01, interaction 0.28 |
| Physician’s perception on how well family could cope with the patient’s situation, in general (three categories, physician, after-death assessment) | 0.62 | <0.001, interaction 0.93 |
| Additional person involved in (discussions about) care for the patient in the last month of life (relative who had not or hardly been involved before) (physician, after-death assessment) | 0.45 | 0.06, interaction 0.60 |
| Physician’s satisfaction with how the communication on directives, goals of treatment, and care with the patient’s representative was going (5-point, physician, after-death assessment) | 0.97 | 0.12, interaction 0.008 |
| Family’s satisfaction with how the communication with the physician(s) was going (discussions on future care, goals of treatment, and care in the last phase of life) since previous assessment (zero to six months before) (5-point, family, after death) | 0.49 | 0.65, interaction 0.11 |
| Family spoke to elderly care physicians in the last week of the patient’s life (zero to seven days, after-death assessment) | 0.24 | 0.36, interaction 0.39 |
| Family did not spent time in the nursing home in the last month of the patient’s life (family, after-death assessment) | 0.94 | 0.24, interaction 0.02 |
| Patient received visitors in last week of life, according to nurse or physician (four categories, physician, after death) | 0.40 | 0.49, interaction 0.75 |
| Family indicated trust in physicians (5-point, family, after-death) | 0.01 | 0.69, interaction 0.95 |
| Family had relationship of trust with physician, as perceived by physician (5-point, physician, after-death) | 0.57 | 0.48, interaction 0.39 |
| Degree to which all persons involved in treatment(s) and care (nursing home staff and family members), agreed about the best treatment(s) and care in the last month of the patient’s life as perceived by family (three categories, family, after death) | 0.67 | 0.08, interaction 0.55 |
| Degree to which all persons involved in treatment(s) and care, agreed about the best treatment(s) and care in the last month of the patient’s life as perceived by physicians (three categories, physicians, after death) | 0.27 | 0.22, interaction 0.01 |
| Treatment goal that took priority: palliative (including symptomatic)c versus other goal (physician) | | |
| - at day of death | 0.75 | 0.54, interaction 0.45 |
| - at baseline assessment | 0.42 | 0.22, interaction 0.69 |
| Any burdensome interventions in the last week of life [ | 0.88 | 0.71, interaction 0.81 |
| Family’s overall rating of care that patient received in the last week of life (5-point, family after death) | 0.15 | 0.86, interaction 0.76 |
| Physician’s overall rating of (quality of) care that patient received in the last week of life (5-point, physician, after death)b (Mediator) | 0.02 | 0.005, interaction 0.56 |
EOLD-CAD, End-of-Life in Dementia-Comfort Assessment in Dying score; GEE, generalized estimating equations.
aAdjusted for potential confounders: assessment of EOLD-CAD by physician versus nurse (last column only), family education, and three variables that related to the time of the patient’s death: families’ baseline understanding, the physician’s assessment of perception of dementia mid-way data collection, and time since the first death in the study. P-values represent models without imputation (n = 122 to 143). Significance did not differ for models with simple imputation (n = 160).
bValues of the two mediators: quality of the relationship: excellent 46%, good 41%, moderate 10%, fair 3%, poor 1%. Physician’s overall rating of quality of care: excellent 6%, very good 37%, good 57%, fair 1%, poor 1%. When combining the last three categories to improve the distribution when used as an outcome variable in the association with the perception of the dementia, the P-value for quality of the relationship was 0.02, and for physician’s overall rating of the quality of care: 0.051.
cPalliative and symptomatic treatment goals both refer to comfort, quality of life and well-being, but differ as to whether prolongation of life is desirable.
Figure 2Selection of patients for analyses. EOLD-CAD, End-of-Life in Dementia-Comfort Assessment in Dying. aVital status 1 July 2010; until then, after-death assessments were being performed. Survival status was monitored until summer 2011. bReasons for incomplete assessment included that staff was not present when the patient was dying (unexpected death, found dead, died in hospital) and delay in completing the death assessment (for example, due to staff change or death immediately after admission), in case we no longer required a death assessment.
Characteristics of patients (n = 161), their families and physicians, outcome and potential confounders
| Female gender,% | 69 |
| Age at death (mean, SD) | 86.0 (6.3) |
| Length of stay in nursing home (mean number of years, SD) | 1.0 (0.7) |
| Dementia severity (mean BANS-S score, SD) | |
| - at baseline | 14.3 (4.2) |
| - at last semi-annual assessment before deathb | 15.7 (4.2) |
| Advanced dementia (GDS 7 and (CPS 5 or 6)),% | |
| - at baseline | 13 |
| - one month before death | 41 |
| | |
| Female gender,% | 64 |
| Age at baseline assessment (mean, SD) | 60.3 (11.7) |
| Relationship to deceased resident,% | |
| - child (including child and legal representative or other combinations) | 59 |
| - spouse | 19 |
| - other | 22 |
| Highest completed education,%c | |
| - none or primary/elementary school | 6 |
| - (high school preparing for) technical/trade school | 56 |
| - high school preparing for BSc or MSc | 10 |
| - BSc or MSc degree | 28 |
| | |
| Female gender,% | 61 |
| Age at assessment of perception of dementia | 43.1 (8.6) |
| Experience as a physician in nursing home (mean number of years, SD) | 11.5 (8.1) |
| Full time equivalent (mean, SD) | 0.78 (0.17) |
| | |
| EOLD-CAD score for comfort (mean, SD)d | 34.1 (5.6) |
| Assessment of EOLD-CAD by physician (versus nurse under supervision of physician),% | 47 |
| Time between patient’s death, mean number of years (SD), and | 0.80 (0.67) |
| - baseline assessment (family, and most physician understanding variables) | |
| - physician’s assessment of perception of dementia | 0.18 (0.74) |
| - death of the first subject in study | 1.93 (0.72) |
BANS-S, Bedford Alzheimer Nursing Severity-Scale (possible range 7 to 28; scores of 17 and higher represent severe dementia [29]); CPS, Cognitive Performance Scale; EOLD-CAD, End-of-life in Dementia-Comfort Assessment in Dying scale (possible range: 14 to 42, higher scores represent better comfort); GDS, Global Deterioration Scale; SD, standard deviation.
aMissing values were 3 for both BANS-S assessments, 11 for advanced dementia at baseline, 1 for relationship family to deceased resident, 2 for family education, 8 for physician demographics, 17 for physician experience, 21 for full time equivalent, 8 for assessment of EOLD-CAD by physician, 8 for time between death and physician’s assessment of perception of dementia, and there were no missing values for the other characteristics.
bThe last assessment before death was the baseline assessment in 50% of cases, and a semi-annual assessment (the first through the fifth) in the other 50% of cases.
cHighest completed education was also a potential confounder.
dNurses’ mean EOLD-CAD scores were not significantly lower than physician’s mean ratings of different patients in the DEOLD study (33.8 SD 6.7 versus 34.4 SD 4.4; P = 0.53; no pairwise comparison possible; adjusted for in analyses even though it did not change results).
Variables referring to the understanding of the dementia and associations with patient’s comfort when dying
| | | | | |
| (1) Comprehension of complications | | (n = 161; overall: 34.1 SD 5.6) | (n = 161) | (n = 151) |
| - understood | 50 | 33.9 (6.5) | reference | reference |
| - not understood | 32 | 33.8 (4.7) | −0.1 (−2.1; 1.9) | −0.3 (−2.4; 1.9) |
| - refused (do not know and similar comments) | 18 | 35.3 (4.5) | 1.4 (−0.7; 3.4) | 0.9 (−1.1; 2.9) |
| | | | ||
| (2) Comprehension of prognosis: life expectancy | | (n = 161; overall: 34.1 SD 5.6) | (n = 161) | (n = 151) |
| - 12 months or less (<1 month: 1%, 1 to 6 months: 5%, | | | | |
| 7 to 12 months: 9%) | 15 | 34.1 (7.5) | reference | reference |
| - more than 12 months | 32 | 33.7 (5.7) | −0.4 (−3.5; 2.7) | −0.6 (−3.6;2.3) |
| - do not know | 53 | 34.4 (5.0) | 0.3 (−2.9; 3.4) | −0.6 (−3.5;2.4) |
| | | | ||
| (3) Having been counseled on health problems in later stages | | (n = 161; overall: 34.1 SD 5.6) | (n = 161) | (n = 151) |
| -yes | 39 | 34.7 (5.7) | reference | reference |
| -no | 61 | 33.8 (5.6) | −0.9 (−2.6; 0.9) | −0.9 (−2.8;1.1) |
| (4) Having been counseled on how long patient may live | | (n = 160; overall: | (n = 160) | (n = 150) |
| | 34.1 (5.6) | | | |
| -yes | 21 | 34.5 (6.2) | reference | reference |
| -no | 79 | 34.0 (5.5) | −0.6 (−2.7; 1.6) | −0.6 (−2.8;1.6) |
| (5) Perception of dementia as “a disease you can die from” | | (n = 160 overall) | (n = 160) | (n = 150) |
| - 1 to 5 scale, coefficient bc | 2.5 (1.2) | 34.2 SD 5.6 | b = − | b = − |
| 29 | 35.1 (5.6) | reference | reference | |
| 14 | 34.9 (7.1) | −0.1 (−3.4; 3.1) | −0.1 (−3.3; 3.1) | |
| 13 | 34.8 (4.6) | −0.3 (−2.7; 2.0) | −1.0 (−3.6; 1.6) | |
| 8 | 33.8 (4.4) | −1.2 (−4.3; 1.8) | −1.6 (−4.3;1.1) | |
| 9 | 31.5 (5.5) | |||
| 28 | 33.5 (5.6) | −1.5 (−4.5; 1.4) | −1.5 (−4.5; 1.6) | |
| | | | | |
| (6) Comprehension of prognosis: perceived life expectancy (baseline) | | (n = 150; overall: 34.4 SD 5.4) | (n = 150) | (n = 138) |
| - 12 months or less (<1 month: 1%, 1 to 6 months: 9%, 7 to 12 months: 16%) | 25 | 33.6 (6.5) | reference | reference |
| - more than 12 months | 59 | 34.4 (5.0) | 0.8 (−1.5; 3.2) | 0.3 (−2.1; 2.8) |
| - do not know | 16 | 35.5 (5.1) | 1.9 (−0.9;4.7) | 1.2 (−1.7; 4.1) |
| | | | ||
| (7) Having counseled how long the patient may live (baseline) | | (n = 150; overall: | (n = 150) | (n = 138) |
| 34.4 SD 5.4) | | | ||
| -yes | 21 | 34.9 (4.9) | reference | reference |
| -no | 79 | 34.2 (5.5) | −0.7 (−2.7; 1.3) | −0.8 (−2.8;1.3) |
| (8) Perception of dementia as “a disease you can die from” (midway study) | | (n = 144 overall) | (n = 144) | (n = 138) |
| - 1 to 5 scale, coefficient bc | 4.7 (0.8) | 34.1 SD 5.7 | b = −1.0 (−2.4; 0.4) | b = −1.0 (−2.2; 0.2) |
| 85 | 34.2 (5.9) | reference | reference | |
| 9 | 35.8 (2.3) | |||
| 3 | 30.5 (5.4) | −3.7 (−7.7; 0.3) | −3.1 (−7.3;1.2) | |
| 0 | - | - | - | |
| 3 | 29.6 (7.3) | −4.6 (−11; 2.2) | −4.9 (−11;1.3) | |
| | | | | |
| Perception of dementia as “a disease you can die from,” 2 to 10 scale, coefficient bc | 8.2 (1.5) | (n = 160 overall) 34.2 SD 5.6 | (n = 160) b = − | (n = 143) b = − |
EOLD-CAD, End-of-life in Dementia-Comfort Assessment in Dying scale (possible range: 14 to 42, higher scores represent better comfort).
aAdjusted for potential confounders: assessment of EOLD-CAD by physician versus nurse; for three variables as they related to the time of the patient’s death: families’ baseline understanding, the physician’s assessment of perception of dementia, and time since the first death in the study; and family education when applicable (for example, no adjustment for family variables in analyzing associations with physician variables only). Adjustment was without imputation which explains the lower n. With simple imputation of mean or median as appropriate, confidence intervals were minimally smaller and coefficients were similar.
bThe P-values refer to GEE versions of ANOVA (unadjusted P-value) or ANCOVA (adjusted).
cb is the regression coefficient for 1-point increment disagreement, where “neither agree, nor disagree” is combined with “don’t know” (families).
dThe coefficients and confidence intervals were similar (adjusted: b = −0.9 (−1.5; -0.3)) when eight cases in which the physician completed the after-death assessment and baseline assessment at the same time, were excluded from the analyses.
Figure 3Model of understanding the progressive nature of dementia and associations with outcome and mediators. Coefficients, standard errors (between brackets), and P-values for the associations in the SEM model are shown. GEE, generalized estimating equations; SEM, structural equation modeling. aFactors between brackets were not measured in our study, but refer to interpretations of a better quality of family-patient relationship as perceived by family as a mediator.