Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes

Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes

Accepted Manuscript Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes Monika T. Wicki, Florian Riese PII: S1936...

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Accepted Manuscript Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes Monika T. Wicki, Florian Riese PII:

S1936-6574(16)30083-8

DOI:

10.1016/j.dhjo.2016.05.008

Reference:

DHJO 499

To appear in:

Disability and Health Journal

Received Date: 18 October 2015 Revised Date:

19 April 2016

Accepted Date: 15 May 2016

Please cite this article as: Wicki MT, Riese F, Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes, Disability and Health Journal (2016), doi: 10.1016/j.dhjo.2016.05.008. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Title Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes

Running title

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Dementia in disability care homes

Authors Monika T. Wicki1, Florian Riese2,3

University of Applied Sciences of Special Needs Education, Zurich, Switzerland

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Division of Psychiatry Research and Psychogeriatric Medicine, University Hospital of

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Psychiatry Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

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URPP Dynamics of Healthy Aging, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

Corresponding author: Monika T. Wicki

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University of Applied Sciences of Special Needs Education Schaffhauserstrasse 239 PO Box 5850 8050 Zurich

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[email protected] 0041 43 317 12 34

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The views expressed in the submitted article are our own and not an official position of the institution or funders.

Conflict of interest disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments: The PALCAP study was funded by SNSF grant 406740_139324 / 1 as part of the NRP67 “End-of-Life” and the University of Applied Sciences of Special Needs Education, Zurich. FR was supported by SNSF NRP67 grant 406740_139363 and the SAMS/Bangerter-Rhyner-Foundation “Health Services Research” grant program.

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Keywords: aging, dementia, prevalence, intellectual disabilities, residential care, care

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organization

Previous presentation of abstracts at meetings regarding the research is acceptable but should be noted on the title page. For copyrighted and/or previously published material (including figures or tables) that is duplicated in the submission, written, signed

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permissions from the copyright holder must be uploaded at time of submission.The

Results were presented at the conference “Das dritte Drittel”, Schweizerische Epilepsie

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Klinik, Zürich, 24. September 2015. The abstract was accepted for presentation at the EAPC world congress in Dublin, 8.-11. June 2016. But no copyrighted and no previously published material is duplicated in the submission.

Word count: 1860

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Abstract word count: 240

Number of references: 23

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Number of tables and figures: 3

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Title Prevalence of dementia and organization of dementia care in Swiss disability care homes

Running title

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Dementia in disability care homes

The views expressed in the submitted article are our own and not an official position of

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the institution or funders.

Conflict of interest disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Keywords: aging, dementia, prevalence, intellectual disability, residential care, care

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organization

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Abstract

Background: With higher life expectancy an increasing number of people with

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intellectual disability (PWID) are at risk for developing dementia.

Objective: Since PWID are an often neglected patient population, the objective of this study was to investigate the prevalence of dementia in residential disability homes in

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Switzerland and to describe how residential homes organise dementia care.

Methods: All residential homes for adults with disabilities in Switzerland (N = 437) were invited to participate in a cross-sectional survey. A subset of questions covered the

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number of residents with diagnosed and suspected dementia and the organisation of dementia care. The response rate to the dementia-related questions was 32% (n = 140 care homes with 10403 residents).

Results: In residential homes specialised in PWID, 5.8% of the residents were reported

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to have a diagnosed or suspected dementia. In 140 deaths of PWID, 26% (n = 37) died with a diagnosed or suspected dementia. Residential homes for PWID mostly rely on internal resources (67.7%), general practitioners (61.3%) or psychiatrists (45.2%) for the care of residents with dementia, while specialised dementia nurses are rarely

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involved (16.1%).

Conclusion: This is the first study in Switzerland to assess the prevalence of dementia in

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PWID. The study indicates a diagnostic gap. Dementia care is provided in a heterogeneous way across Swiss residential homes for people with disability. Since the number of PWID requiring such care will likely increase in the future, best practice examples and guidelines are needed.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Introduction

Increasing longevity has been one of the most remarkable changes in people with intellectual disability (PWID) over the last decades. As life expectancy of PWID extends into older age, dementia is an increasing cause of morbidity and mortality. The

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prevalence of dementia in PWID is comparable with or even higher than in the general population [1–4]. Preexisting cognitive impairment may complicate the diagnosis of dementia

in

PWID

possibly

leading

to

underdiagnosis

and

consequently

mismanagement [4]. It is therefore of interest to characterize possible diagnostic and

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care provision gaps in order to provide a rationale for improvement of care.

In Switzerland – like in many other countries – the majority services for PWID have

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historically evolved not from the medical or nursing sector but from the social work and pedagogical sector [5]. In care homes for PWID, staff may mainly come from nonmedical, non-nursing background and may therefore lack the specific knowledge and skills for the new challenge which is dementia care, particularly in areas such as pain and symptom management [6]. In order to improve care competencies in these areas,

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knowledge transfer from non-ID dementia care seems to be a promising approach: a specialised prosthetic environment based on non-ID dementia care principles was found to contribute to maintenance of skills and activities in older PWID, likely by facilitating participation on an individual level and providing appropriate intellectual challenges [7,

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8]. Consensus recommendations for the evaluation and management of dementia in PWID have recently become available for the United States [9], but there is currently no specific guidance for Switzerland. Furthermore, dementia in PWID is not covered in

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detail in the Swiss dementia strategy [10], i. e. no specific diagnostic or therapeutic measures or service development aims are included in the strategy despite the approximately 27,000 PWID in Switzerland [11–13]. Again, this lack of consideration for the special needs of PWID with dementia may be at least partially explained by the historical development of disability care services outside the medical paradigm.

The purpose of our study is to broaden the necessary database for a discussion on care organisation for dementia in residential homes for PWID in Switzerland. The objectives of our study were to investigate for the first time the prevalence of dementia in residential homes for PWID in Switzerland and to explore the organisation of dementia

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care in these facilities. We hypothesized that dementia is currently underdiagnosed in Swiss PWID living in residential homes and that dementia care is fragmented due to the lack of specific guidelines and care pathways.

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Methods All residential homes for adults with disabilities in Switzerland (N = 437) were invited to participate in a cross-sectional survey. The list of residential homes was obtained from the national association for service providers for people with disabilities (INSOS

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Switzerland) and the IVSE (Intercantonal cooperation of social-medical organisations). The survey was distributed on paper to the directors of the residential homes from Oct. 2012 – Jan. 2013 and was available in German and French. The directors were asked to

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serve as informants on PWID living in their corresponding residential homes. In order to improve response rates, non-responding directors received a reminder phone call one month later. Questionnaires were returned to the investigators by mail. The survey was based on the questionnaires developed by D’Haene et al. [14] and Wagemans et al. [15] and is available from the corresponding author upon request. As previously published

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[16,17], the survey comprised two parts, one part focusing on written policies on palliative care and training in palliative care (40 questions), the other on people who died within the last five years, including demographic variables (26 questions). Regarding dementia, four questions investigated the prevalence and organisation of

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care: (1) number of residents and number of residents with diagnosed dementia at present time, (2) number of residents with suspected dementia at present time, (3)

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number of deaths and number of deaths with diagnosed or suspected dementia in the last five years and (4) organisation of dementia care. For the last question, directors could choose several answers from the following options: care in residential home by regular staff (use of internal resources), consultation with psychiatrists, neurologists, geriatricians, general practitioners, specialised nurses for people with dementia, change in accommodation such as transfer to nursing home, or other. Due to the type of study, the cantonal ethics committee Zurich, Switzerland, waived the necessity for ethics approval. Data from the paper questionnaires was entered into spreadsheet format manually and analyzed using SPSS version 21. Results are presented with descriptive

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statistics. Where appropriate, differences were analysed with Chi-square tests. P ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results

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Residential home characteristics

The total response rate to the whole survey was 58% (N = 254 residential homes, i. e. their directors). The subset of dementia-related questions reported here were answered by 140 residential home directors (32%) covering 93 residential homes for PWID and

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47 for people with primarily sensory, physical or psychological impairment. Eightythree directors reported to have had at least one death among residents in their facility

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during the past five years. The mean age of all residents was 45.5 years (SD 9.1). 65% of the residential homes were smaller homes providing care for 1–49 people, 25% medium-sized homes providing care for 50–100 people and 65% larger homes providing care for more than 100 people. The smallest home provided care for six

Dementia prevalence

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people; the largest for 304 people.

In 2012, 7468 residents were living in the 93 residential homes for PWID, of which,

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141 residents had a diagnosis of dementia (1.8%). Residential home directors and caregivers suspected dementia for additional 305 (4%) of the residents (see table 2). The 47 residential homes for people with primarily sensory, physical or psychological

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impairment provide housing for 2935 residents. Of these, 51 residents (1.7%) had a diagnosed dementia and 55 residents (1.8%) had a suspected dementia (see table 2).

Insert Table 1 about here

Deaths with dementia

Eighty-three residential homes, where people had died within the last five years, provided detailed information on 239 deceased residents (140 with ID, 99 without ID).

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Of these, 7.9% had a diagnosed dementia. Dementia was suspected in a further 11.7% of deaths (see table 3).

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Insert Table 2 about here

Organisation of dementia care

People with dementia living in residential disability homes most frequently receive care

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by the regular staff, i. e. with internal resources (58.6%), or by general practitioners (55.0%) and psychiatrists (45.7%). In only 16.1% of the residential homes a specialised dementia nurse is asked for support in caring for residents with dementia. When

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diagnosed with dementia, in 17.1% of the residential homes residents are transferred to nursing homes (see table 4). Although the differences are small, more residential homes for PWID rely on internal staff and general practitioners than homes for people with other disabilities (χ2(1, N = 140) = 9.60, p < .05 and χ2(1, N = 140) = 4.43, p < .05,

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respectively).

Insert Table 3 about here

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In 53 of 82 residential homes (65%), in which care of persons with dementia is organised within the organisation, psychiatrists are regularly involved, and in 63 of 82 residential homes (77%) a physician is involved (28 of them do not involve a

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psychiatrist too).

Discussion

To our knowledge, this is the first Swiss study on prevalence of dementia and organisation of dementia care in the often medically underserved population of people with disabilities. We found a very low rate of diagnosed dementia in Swiss residential homes for disability care. In residential homes for PWID, about one quarter of deceased residents had either a diagnosed or suspected dementia. Dementia care in residential

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homes for PWID was mostly provided by internal staff and general practitioners. Except for psychiatrists, dementia specialists were rarely consulted.

Compared to previous studies on the prevalence of dementia in PWID in other countries (reviewed in [18]), the prevalence of diagnosed dementia was very low in our study

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(1.8%). Dementia was suspected in a higher number of PWID (4.0%), providing further evidence for a diagnostic gap in this population. As preexisting cognitive impairments can complicate the diagnosis of dementia in PWID, several instruments, e.g. [19–22] and assessment guidelines [9] have been developed in order to aid the diagnostic

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process. However, only few of these are available in German [23] and –in our experience– they are rarely used by non-specialists. Future policies and training activities should promote the use of such tools in order to narrow the diagnostic gap and

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consequently improve access to dementia care. At the level of residential homes, a higher level of formalized dementia diagnoses could stimulate the development and implementation of prosthetic environments suitable for PWID with dementia – which may help conserving residual skills and abilities [8]. Dementia was diagnosed or suspected in about one quarter of deaths that occurred in PWID. Due to the increasing

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longevity of PWID, it is likely that the need for dementia end-of-life care will further increase in the future. Staff training in palliative care as well as a focus on advance care planning may help preparing institutions and residents better for this trend.

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In terms of organisation of dementia care, our data indicates that the majority of residential facilities for PWID either rely on inhouse staff or general practitioners to provide care. Psychiatrists are the third group of care providers that play a major role.

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For future educational activities, these groups are therefore preferential targets. In contrast, specialised dementia nurses or geriatricians are consulted in only a minority of residential homes. This may – at least partially – reflect the challenges in collaboration between disability institutions and external specialists who are often not used to the communication needs of PWID. Surprisingly, PWID were transferred to nursing homes for dementia care in only about 16% of residential homes. If housing continuity is to be maintained at the current level, staff of residential homes will likely need more training in dementia and improved contact to specialist dementia care.

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The major limitation of this study is its retrospective design which favors recall bias. Diagnosed and suspected dementia in PWID were furthermore reported by directors of residential homes not by treating physicians. However, in our view both of these primary sources of bias rather work in favour of underestimating a possible diagnostic gap. As cross-sectional study, it does not allow us to draw definite conclusions about

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trends in prevalence or care organisation. Our study is furthermore limited by its response rate of only 32% to the dementia-related questions, which could at least partly be driven by the directors’ underestimation of the problem in their respective care

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homes.

In conclusion, our survey provides evidence for a diagnostic gap regarding dementia in persons with disabilities living in Swiss residential homes. We furthermore provide

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evidence for heterogeneity of dementia care among the facilities. Non-specialist care providers like inhouse staff and general practitioners shoulder the majority of dementia care in PWID. Their efforts should be supported by collecting best-practice examples, specific training and development of guidance policies. Future research should address which factors determine whether a PWID with dementia is transferred to a nursing

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dementia.

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home and which interventions are effective in stabilizing quality of life in PWID with

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References

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 1: Dementia prevalence in Swiss disability care homes

Residential

Residential

homes for

homes for people homes

people with ID* with other

All residential

(in percent, n

93 homes, 7468 percent, n = 47 places)

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(in percent; n = disabilities** (in =140 homes, 10403 places)

homes, 2935

1.8

1.7

Suspected dementia

4.0

1.8

All dementia

5.8

* ID: Intellectual Disability

1.8

3.5

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Diagnosed dementia

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places)

3.5

5.3

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** Other disabilities: primarily sensory, physical or psychological impairment

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 2: Dementia among deceased residents with or without intellectual disability in Swiss disability care homes (2008 - 2012)

Deaths without

Total deaths

with ID* in percent

ID* in percent

in percent (n)

(n)

(n)

No dementia

71.4 (100)

86.9 (86)

77.8 (186)

Diagnosed dementia

10.7 (15)

4 (4)

7.9 (19)

Suspected dementia

15.7 (22)

6.1 (6)

2.1 (3)

3 (3)

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*ID: intellectual disability

11.7 (28) 2.5 (6)

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Unknown

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Deaths

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 3: Organisation of care for dementia in Swiss disability care residential homes

Homes for Homes for other

Total, in

with ID, in disabilities, percent (n

P

percent (n

in percent

= 140)

= 93)

(n = 47)

67.7

40.4

58.6

0.002

61.3

42.6

55.0

0.027

psychatrists

45.2

46.8

45.7

0.497

neurologists

22.6

19.1

21,4

0.218

16.1

19.1

17.1

0.200

14.3

0.272

residential

general practitioners

nursing home specialised

nurses not

16.1

10.6

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dementia

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transfer to

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home

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care within

6,4

7.9

0.462

geriatricians

6.5

4.3

5,7

0.459

Other

5.4

2.1

4,3

0.342

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8.6

organised

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people

*: p-value in chi-square test, p<0.05 indicated by bold print