| Literature DB >> 32318261 |
Emma Tenison1, Agnes Smink2, Sabi Redwood1,3, Sirwan Darweesh2, Hazel Cottle4, Angelika van Halteren2, Pieter van den Haak2, Ruth Hamlin4, Jan Ypinga2, Bastiaan R Bloem2, Yoav Ben-Shlomo1, Marten Munneke2, Emily Henderson1,4.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease is the second most common neurodegenerative condition after Alzheimer's disease. The number of patients will rise dramatically due to ageing of the population and possibly also due to environmental issues. It is widely recognised that the current models of care for people with Parkinson's disease or a form of atypical parkinsonism lack continuity, are reactive to problems rather than proactive, and do not adequately support individuals to self-manage. Integrated models of care have been developed for other chronic conditions, with a range of positive effects. A multidisciplinary team of professionals in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, all with a long history of caring for patients with movement disorders, used knowledge of deficiencies with the current model of care, an understanding of integrated care in chronic disease and the process of logic modelling, to develop a novel approach to the care of patients with Parkinson's disease. We propose a new model, termed PRIME Parkinson (Proactive and Integrated Management and Empowerment in Parkinson's Disease), which is designed to manage problems proactively, deliver integrated, multidisciplinary care, and empower patients and their carers. It has five main components: (1) personalised care management, (2) education and empowerment of patients and carers, (3) empowerment of healthcare professionals, (4) a population health approach, and (5) support of the previous four components by patient- and professional-friendly technology. Having mapped the processes required for the success of this initiative, there is now a requirement to assess its effect on health-related and quality of life outcomes as well as determining its cost-effectiveness. In the next phase of the project, we will implement PRIME Parkinson in selected areas of the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32318261 PMCID: PMC7149455 DOI: 10.1155/2020/8673087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Problems with current care model and challenges to be addressed by an integrated model of care.
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| Lack of multidisciplinary collaboration and continuity of care | Deliver integrated care and continuity of care |
Figure 1The logic model structure used to design the intervention.
Figure 2The logic model structure was applied to one of the six “problems with current care” in order to show potential strategies and activities to address the problem, the outputs/process measures, and the anticipated outcomes. This figure summarizes the content from the detailed logic model which was developed.
A hypothetical case study. Scenario 1 illustrates a chain of events resulting in an adverse outcome for a patient with PD. Scenario 2 offers an example of how this scenario could be managed differently with the application of the PRIME-Parkinson model. FRAX refers to the University of Sheffield fracture risk assessment tool [45].
| Case study |
| Mrs. Ahmed is a 78-year-old lady who has had idiopathic PD for 5 years. She has recently begun to have a few “minor falls” which she has put down to “getting older.” She has noticed she sometimes feels dizzy when she stands up but doesn't like to bother her GP about it and knows it can be very hard to get an appointment. She considers mentioning it to her PD consultant when she next goes to clinic in 6 months' time but decides she won't because she believes the dizziness probably doesn't have anything to do with her Parkinson's disease. |
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| Mrs. Ahmed begins to feel less confident going out and stops going to social activities. While taking the bins out one evening, she has a bad fall onto a concrete path, landing on her left side. |
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| Remembering that light-headedness was mentioned at a PRIME-Parkinson-delivered information session she had recently attended, Mrs. Ahmed contacts the single point of access helpline to discuss her concerns about her recent dizzy spells. This information is logged in the collaboration platform and relayed to Mrs. Ahmed's Parkinson's nurse who telephones her to discuss her symptoms further and discovers that she has also begun to have a few falls as well as a number of “near misses.” The Parkinson's nurse explores the impact which these symptoms are having on her life; Mrs. Ahmed fears that she may not be able to attend her nephew's wedding next month due to her dizziness and poor balance. |
| Together, they agree a plan of action, with the aim of helping Mrs. Ahmed achieve her goal of attending the wedding: |
| (i) Blood pressure (BP) and medications are reviewed; the Parkinson's nurse suggests to the GP that he consider stopping amlodipine and Mrs. Ahmed is given advise about increasing her fluid intake, with a plan to review BP and symptoms following these changes. |