| Literature DB >> 26037324 |
Christin Richter1, Almuth Berg2, Steffen Fleischer3, Sascha Köpke4, Katrin Balzer5, Eva-Maria Fick6, Andreas Sönnichsen7, Susanne Löscher8, Horst Christian Vollmar9,10, Burkhard Haastert11, Andrea Icks12, Charalabos-Markos Dintsios13, Eva Mann14, Ursula Wolf15,16, Gabriele Meyer17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The majority of nursing home residents with dementia experience behavioural and psychological symptoms like apathy, agitation, and anxiety. According to analyses of prescription prevalence in Germany, antipsychotic drugs are regularly prescribed as first-line treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms in persons with dementia, although guidelines clearly prioritise non-pharmacological interventions. Frequently, antipsychotic drugs are prescribed for inappropriate reasons and for too long without regular reviewing. The use of antipsychotics is associated with adverse events like increased risk of falling, stroke, and mortality. The aim of the study is to investigate whether a person-centred care approach, successfully evaluated in nursing homes in the United Kingdom, can be implemented in German nursing homes and, in comparison with a control group, can result in a clinically relevant reduction of the proportion of residents with antipsychotic prescriptions. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26037324 PMCID: PMC4464611 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0268-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Flow chart of EPCentCare
Components of the study intervention
| Optimised usual care | Person-centred care (PCC) approach | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Continuing medical education [ | Medication review every 3 months [ | Information for nursing home staff | Training and support of “experts for PCC for the elderly” [ | |
| Control group | x | x | ||
| Intervention group | x | x | x | x |
aNumbers in brackets indicate references concerning the theoretical and/or empirical background of study components
Measurements at resident level
| Point of measurement | Characteristics | Measure | |
|---|---|---|---|
| t0 | Baselinea | Socio-demographic and clinical data | Routine data |
| Quality of life | QoL-AD | ||
| Cognition | DSS | ||
| Agitated behaviour | CMAI | ||
| Medication data | Routine data | ||
| Falls and fall-related medical attention | Routine data | ||
| Physical restraints | Routine data | ||
| t1 t2 t3 | 3, 6, and 9 months after baseline | Medication data | Routine data |
| Falls and fall-related medical attention | Routine data | ||
| Physical restraints | Routine data | ||
| Clinical course (emergencies, hospital admissions, change in nursing care dependency, and physician contacts) | Routine data | ||
| t4 | 12 months after baseline | Quality of life | QoL-AD |
| Cognition | DSS | ||
| Agitated behaviour | CMAI | ||
| Medication data | Routine data | ||
| Falls and fall-related medical attention | Routine data | ||
| Physical restraints | Routine data | ||
| Clinical course (emergencies, hospital admissions, change in nursing care dependency, and physician contacts) | Routine data | ||
aNew participants after t0 will be assessed with the same characteristics and measures as for baseline at the subsequent measurement point
Summary of data for medication reviews
| Category | Variable |
|---|---|
| Medication dataa Long-term medication (antipsychotic drugs) | • Registered trade name or agent |
| • Dosage form and regimen | |
| • Daily dose | |
| • Prescription period | |
| • Prescribing physician | |
| • Indication | |
| PRN medication (antipsychotic drugs) | • Registered trade name or agent |
| • Dosage form | |
| • Number of received partial dose | |
| • Suggested maximum dose | |
| • Prescription period | |
| • Prescribing physician | |
| • Case of need | |
| Further current long-term and PRN medication | • Registered trade name or agent |
| • Dose | |
| • Regimen | |
| Medical carea | • Psychopathological reports |
| • Number of physician contacts (GP, neurologist, psychiatrist, and geriatrician) over the last three months and date of the last visit | |
| • Body weight: current and three months before | |
| • Intolerance of drugs | |
| Neuropsychiatric symptomsa (over the last 2 weeks) | • Delusion |
| • Hallucination | |
| • Aggression | |
| • Verbal abnormality | |
| • Agitation | |
| • Depression | |
| • Anxiety | |
| • Apathy | |
| • Disinhibition | |
| • Irritability | |
| • Sleep disturbances | |
| Potential adverse effects of antipsychotic drugsa (over the last 2 weeks) | • Pain |
| • Aberrant motor behaviour | |
| • Malposition | |
| • Repetitive behaviour | |
| • Tremor | |
| • Somnolence | |
| • Delirium | |
| Socio-demographic and clinical datab | • Age |
| • Gender | |
| • Body height | |
| • Relevant clinical diagnoses | |
| • Falls |
aSource: routine documentation of residents
bSource: case report form