| Literature DB >> 28182172 |
Joseph Elias Ibrahim1, Laura J Anderson1, Aleece MacPhail2, Janaka Jonathan Lovell2, Marie-Claire Davis1, Margaret Winbolt3.
Abstract
The burden of chronic disease is greater in individuals with dementia, a patient group that is growing as the population is aging. The cornerstone of optimal management of chronic disease requires effective patient self-management. However, this is particularly challenging in older persons with a comorbid diagnosis of dementia. The impact of dementia on a person's ability to self-manage his/her chronic disease (eg, diabetes mellitus or heart failure) varies according to the cognitive domain(s) affected, severity of impairment and complexity of self-care tasks. A framework is presented that describes how impairment in cognitive domains (attention and information processing, language, visuospatial ability and praxis, learning and memory and executive function) impacts on the five key processes of chronic disease self-management. Recognizing the presence of dementia in a patient with chronic disease may lead to better outcomes. Patients with dementia require individually tailored strategies that accommodate and adjust to the individual and the cognitive domains that are impaired, to optimize their capacity for self-management. Management strategies for clinicians to counter poor self-management due to differentially impaired cognitive domains are also detailed in the presented framework. Clinicians should work in collaboration with patients and care givers to assess a patient's current capabilities, identify potential barriers to successful self-management and make efforts to adjust the provision of information according to the patient's skill set. The increasing prevalence of age-related chronic illness along with a decline in the availability of informal caregivers calls for innovative programs to support self-management at a primary care level.Entities:
Keywords: chronic disease; cognitive domains; dementia; self-management
Year: 2017 PMID: 28182172 PMCID: PMC5283068 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S121626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Effect of cognitive impairment due to dementia on chronic disease self-managementa
| Tasks and subtasks of self-management | Cognitive domain | Impact of impairment, possible presentations | Suggested strategies |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Problem solving: identifying problems and generating solutions | |||
| Patient acquires information | Attention and information processing: requires adequate orientation and alertness, capacity to sustain attention and adequate processing speed (to “keep up” with presentation of info). Reduced processing speed is a common aspect aging. However, if the rate of decline significantly exceeds normal rates of aging, the patient may struggle to process verbal information and will become overwhelmed, making it difficult to attend to new information. | Patient may talk over the top of the clinician or ask repetitive questions. | Asking a patient at the end of a session to summarize the key points of information that were discussed will give an indication of understanding and assist the patient to further encode and rehearse important information. Encouraging carers or family members to attend appointments may be appropriate. Separating information into manageable chunks and checking understanding at each step. Written notes or reminders of important information. Such notes should be composed in such a way that does not require the patient to rely on recall of previously conveyed information in order to understand or act upon them. |
| Patient understands significance of information | Executive functions and abstract reasoning. | Patient may be unable to acknowledge the extent of their health issues. They may disregard the implications of ill-health. They may be dismissive of proposed solutions. | Explanation of disease process in very simple terms and provide concrete evidence of the patient’s pathology (eg, imaging results). Provide clear examples how the disease will impact ability to enjoy personally meaningful activities (eg, “unless we get this under control, it will mean that you will have to stop driving. That will make it hard to keep playing bowls and visiting your grandchildren”). |
| Patient generates solutions | Fluency and flexibility of thinking (sub-domain of executive functions): requires the ability to think of solutions to novel or unforeseen problems as they arise. | Patient unable to generate simple solutions to disease management problems (eg, patient fails to visit a GP or specialist for important review because person they usually obtain lift from is not available. They are unable to generate the idea of using a taxi or calling somebody for assistance). | Teach the patient a limited variety of response options before the need arises. These options will provide a baseline to refer to when they are in a situation where a response is required spontaneously. |
| 2. Decision-making: acting in response to changes in disease condition | |||
| Choosing the appropriate solution among possible solutions generated | Executive functions: requires the ability to think abstractly, predict consequences and formulate plans. Requires the ability to self-monitor and to shift from previously learned patterns of behavior in the face of novel problems. | Patients may respond concretely (eg, repeatedly presenting to hospital for non-life-threatening changes in condition) if they are unable to plan and predict (eg, to self-titrate their medication or to escalate problems to their GP). | Regular monitoring and reassurance to increase patients and family’s confidence that problems can be self-managed successfully. Access to home-based supports such as District Nursing, home help and regular GP contact. |
| 3. Finding and utilizing appropriate resources | |||
| Use medical devices | Praxis, visuospatial and constructional abilities: requires high-level motor control and to be able to coordinate complex motor movements. Requires ability to process the visuospatial elements of equipment and construct or modify devices to enable use. | Failure to adhere to medication and lifestyle regimen that is dependent upon practical skills, such as comprehension of written instructions/health information, setting up and using equipment or monitoring devices (eg, inhalers for pulmonary disease, glucometers for diabetes mellitus monitoring, use of CPAP for severe sleep apnea). | Direct observation of patient’s use of equipment. Use of tailored equipment. Allied health input from physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech pathology, diabetes educators, etc. |
| Attends clinical appointments | Planning and response regulation (executive functions): requires the ability to plan and carry out plan without being waylaid by competing goals or demands. | Appears overwhelmed and anxious or fails to attend appointments, particularly if they are not consistently scheduled for the same time or if there are multiple appointments scheduled with different, but similar service providers. | Provision of call back or reminder notices or similar prompts. Establish routine that does not vary. Provision of escort. Where possible provide home visits. |
| 4. Working with health care professionals to make decisions about treatment | |||
| Negotiates shared goals of care with clinicians in order to guide health care decisions | Executive functions: requires insight, judgment and abstract reasoning. | May be unable to agree upon mutually acceptable goals of care and appear “stubborn” due to lack of insight build. | Rapport building to develop a patient’s trust. Clinician may present a small selection of management options at a health literacy level (brief, plain language) that the patient may understand. Efforts should be made to identify the reason for unwillingness to take on new goals (ie, whether past habits serve a protective psychological purpose). Illustrated how health care goals may serve the patient’s personally valued goals/priorities in life. |
| Communicates with services and negotiates interpersonal relationships | Expressive and receptive language. | Deterioration in language skills, often characterized by word-finding difficulties, makes it difficult for these patients to accurately express the nature of changes in their symptoms to clinicians. They may be unable to describe symptoms clearly or appear to delay seeking appropriate help. | Careful clarification of symptoms, which may require the use of closed questions. Collateral history from family members and carers may help identify concerns. |
| Psychological and emotional adjustment | Requires intact response regulation (including emotional control) in order to behave appropriately in social situations. | Patients can often appear overwhelmed and anxious even by seemingly small changes in their health or care regime. Patients may also become increasingly combative with care providers as an expression of feelings of helplessness in the context of worsening symptoms. | Encourage patients to attend clinic with a supportive family member or friend. Clinicians can undertake basic training to respond to patients who are aggressive or emotionally labile. Written behavior support plans may be useful for patients who are known to be persistently aggressive. |
| 5. Taking action | |||
| Adheres to monitoring, medication and lifestyle change | Planning and response regulation (executive functions): requires the ability to plan and organize daily activities and then regulate their behavior in order to execute their plan. | Patients with impaired executive functions may be impulsive or unable to override ingrained habits in order to maintain agreed patterns of behavior changes. | Without further investigation may initially appear as non-compliance or a nonchalant approach to medication management. Implement behavior change to circumvent entrenched behavior patterns. If repeated consistently, new routines may develop into habits that require less conscious thought. May need to involve family members or carers. |
Note:
Self-management skills as described by Lorig and Holman.13
Abbreviations: CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure; GP, general practitioner.
Reasons for under-recognition of dementia and chronic disease
| Reason | Issues related to under-recognition |
|---|---|
| Health system is under-prepared for a relatively new area of medicine | Rapid surge in prevalence of dementia in recent decades. |
| Subtle onset of disease | Subtle difficulties in the performance of everyday activities are common in individuals with mild cognitive impairment 2 years before a diagnosis of dementia. |
| Health professionals lack skills to recognize dementia | Often physicians may not recognize subtle cognitive deficits during routine office visits. Increased awareness is needed in the health care sector. |
| Limited awareness of issue by health professionals | Increasing sub-specialization leads to clinicians focusing on single organs or systems, leading to reduced awareness of the patient’s overall functioning, including signs of cognitive impairment. |
| Fear and social stigma of disease | Ongoing social stigma of dementia is also present among clinicians. |
| Assumptions about dementia | Belief that dementia will present as severe and obvious impairment. |
| Social isolation | Patients without family or carers can hinder diagnosis as some screening tools (eg, functional assessments) rely on caregiver observation and report. |