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Palliative
care for patients with dementia more
available but still not adequate
November 16,2010-- A new national survey
conducted by researchers from Indiana
University and the Regenstrief Institute has
found that while palliative care may be
available for those with dementia, there are
significant barriers to providing or
receiving services to relieve the pain,
eating difficulties and other symptoms
associated with dementia.
The survey findings are reported in the Nov.
2010 issue of the Journal
of the American Geriatrics Society.
"Although the general public and many
physicians do not associate palliative or
hospice care with dementia, dementia is a
terminal disease and should be respected as
such. Palliative care is needed throughout
the illness and can provide those who are
unable to communicate their needs with a
better quality of life as well as lowering
the stress the illness places on caregivers
and the entire family," said study first
author Alexia M. Torke, M.D., M.S., who is
an IU School of Medicine assistant professor
of medicine and geriatrics and a Regenstrief
Institute investigator.
She is also on the faculty of the IU Center
for Aging Research and the Fairbanks Center
for Clinical Medical Ethics.
IU Center for Aging Research and the
Fairbanks Center for Clinical Medical Ethics. Hospice
care provides palliative care at the final
stage of life.
Palliative care, which is often provided in
the patient's home, can be administered
through the course of the disease along with
medical treatment and does not hasten death.
Hospices provide palliative care to
individuals in the final weeks or months of
life. According to National Hospice and
Palliative Care Organization data, only 11
percent of hospice patients in the
facilities had a primary diagnosis of
dementia. That may be because it is often
difficult to determine how close to the end
of life dementia patients may be and they
therefore are not provided with hospice
care.
In the new study the researchers conducted
telephone interviews about the provision of
palliative care to patients with dementia
with directors of 426 hospice and palliative
care programs.
A detailed online survey was completed by 80
program directors.
The study found that 94 percent of hospice
and 72 percent of palliative care program
directors reported that their programs have
recently cared for patients with dementia.
This is a substantial increase from a 1995
study that found only 21 percent of hospice
programs had provided this care.
Non-hospice palliative care programs are
relatively new and typically care for
patients earlier in the disease before the
patient is hospice eligible. To learn more
about these programs, the authors asked
in-depth questions of palliative care
program directors.
The directors indicated the existence of
significant barriers to providing
non-hospice palliative care. These obstacles
included inadequate insurance coverage for
home services by Medicare and other
insurers, home health benefits that expired
before the individual was eligible for
hospice care as well as insufficient family
and healthcare provider knowledge of
palliative care for dementia.
Strategies highlighted as critical for
successful palliative care for dementia and
reduction of caregiver burden were an
interdisciplinary team usually composed of a
nurse, social worker, physician and
chaplain, collaboration with community
organizations and campaigns to provide
information to families and physicians.
"While it is heartening to see that most of
these programs provide care for patients
with dementia, there are many, many more who
need this care than are receiving it.
"Education
and policy efforts should focus on
communicating with families and providers
about palliative care, supporting caregivers
who often are frustrated in their efforts to
improve quality of life for a loved one with
dementia, and reforming reimbursement
structures to provide coverage earlier in
the disease when patients have high needs
but are not hospice eligible," said Dr.
Torke.