What Caregivers Think of Cholinesterase Inhibitors Neena L. Chappell, PhD, FRSC Canada Research Chair in Social Gerontology University of Victoria

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NANPA Oversight Working Group Report to the NANC October 17, 2000 Co-Chairs Pat Caldwell & Karen Mulberry.
Advertisements

Grundtvig Learning Partnership. Athens Association of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Athens Association of Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders.
Development and Implementation of a Recovery-Based System: Comparison of Instruments for Assessing Recovery Jeanette M. Jerrell, Ph.D. Professor of Neuropsychiatry,
WORKING FOR A HEALTHY FUTURE IOM Consulting Limited. London. UKwww.iom-world.org Occupational Health Services – An Introduction Dr James Preston MFOM Accredited.
Background Communication with patients contemplating early phase cancer trial participation can be challenging. It is an ethical imperative that consent.
Young and Uninsured: Insurance Patterns of Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Cancer Survivors 2014 Applied Demography Conference Susanne Schmidt, Helen.
Well, shortly after a breakdown – I am talking about my own experience – you feel raw. You are very sensitive and you are easily hurt. It is not easy.
Indianapolis Discovery Network for Dementia Comparative Effectiveness Research Trial of Alzheimers Disease Drug: COMET-AD.
Clinical Epidemiology Study Who benefits? How do we know? B Lynn Beattie MD FRCPC Professor Emeritus Div Geri Med, Dept Med, UBC Medical Director UBCH.
Barriers to Health Service Utilization by Immigrant Families Raising a Child with a Disability Unmet Needs and the Role of Discrimination.
Transnational Higher Education Networks for Learning and Teaching (TNLTs) in Geography Dr Kelly Wakefield.
Background Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is a long term condition causing unpredictable episodes of pain and disability. Management of RA in secondary care.
17th October 2012 Dr Julian Tomkinson
It’s still all about the Patient. Narratives Today I’m going to tell you some stories about how I think we can influence GP commissioners. I hope you.
Alzheimer’s Drug Therapy Initiative: Seniors Medication Study (SMS) Ging-Yuek Robin Hsiung, MD MHSc FRCPC FACP Assistant Professor Division of Neurology,
Step-Up. 2 What Does it Mean to STEP UP? Prosocial Behavior – Any act performed with the goal of benefiting another person Bystander Intervention Intervening.
Introduction and Aim Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic neurological disease involving demyelination of the nervous system. There are three key MS sub-types:
Testing Hypotheses About Proportions
ESTABLISHED 1875 – 125 YEARS OF EXCELLENCE Developing Reflexivity in Students: an essential component for clinical reasoning and decision making Dr Marie.
Dr Frances Bunn Centre for Research in Primary & Community Care
What is narrative interviewing?
Yvonne Hanson June 7, 2012 Regina Research Day.  What do we know about the psychological & emotional implications of overweight & obesity in pregnancy?
Medication Therapy Management The Patient and Provider Variables.
Client satisfaction and perceptions of treatments in the North American Opiate Medication Initiative Kirsten Marchand, MSc Candidate at UBC SPPH Canadian.
The One Minute Preceptor:
Entrusting Care The elements of a successful respite program An Australian Government Initiative.
Case Study 3. Simulated Case Study 3 Asynchronous online support where a client seeks to engage in counselling with an independent online practitioner.
Therapeutic Communication NUR 3051 Rochelle Roberts MS RN.
FIONA WEBSTER, PhD Understanding patient experiences.
PERSONAL BUDGETS AND THE CARER - SERVICE USER RELATIONSHIP The Carers Federation and De Montfort University.
Secrecy and silence in Huntington’s disease Eleanor Wilson PhD Student Supervisors: Dr. Kristian Pollock & Dr. Aimee Aubeeluck Funding: The Sue Ryder Care.
Assertiveness and Persuasion. What comes to mind when someone says you are:  Assertive  Persuasive  Aggressive  Passive  Manipulative  Controlling.
An exploratory study of client’s (refugees and asylum seekers) perceptions on client-centred counselling/psychotherapy before and after therapy. By Divine.
Towards an ideal of gender equity? Simon Lapierre, Ph.D. School of Social Work McGill University, Montreal Child protection.
PHASE 1 Facilitating discussion on treatment preferences and advance care planning in cancer patients using the vignette technique Funding: Department.
Sharing the diagnosis of dementia Alistair Burns Manchester Mental Health and Social Care Trust University of Manchester Manchester Academic Health Science.
Benefits of Adult Day Services for Caregivers: Effective, Sustainable and Affordable Steven H. Zarit, Ph.D. Penn State University LTSS Policy Summit October.
1 Copyright, 1996 © Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc.Copyright, 1996 © Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc. The Human Bean A biopsychosocial model to increase.
Hysterosalpingogram- the patients perspective Maggie Williams Clinical Lead Nurse Radiology Gateshead Health NHSF Trust.
Learning from families and practitioners to optimise recruitment to children’s clinical trials RECRUIT study findings Investigating team: Val Shilling,
Determining capacity and protecting subjects who have lost capacity Jason Karlawish, MD University of Pennsylvania.
© Manchester self-harm project, University of Manchester. All rights reserved. Not to be reproduced in whole or in part without the permission of the copyright.
Module six Looking after yourself. This section covers: 6.1 Impact of our emotions at work 6.2 Self care strategies, boundaries and looking after ourselves.
General practitioners caring for people with dementia and their carers Dr Catherine Speechly 1, Ms Belinda Giles 1, Prof Charles- Bridges-Webb 1, Dr Yvonne.
Choosing Your Primary Research Method What do you need to find out that your literature did not provide?
Survey Survey Healthcare Professionals Called to Missions Center For Medical MIssions March 2008.
® Introduction Mental Health Predictors of Pain and Function in Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain Olivia D. Lara, K. Ashok Kumar MD FRCS Sandra Burge,
Welcome To Sociology 272: Gender Identities, Interactions, and Relationships Professor: Dr. Richard N. Pitt Teaching Assistant:
My Aging Loved One Needs Help. What Are My Options? Part II Understanding Senior Living Options.
Alzheimer’s patients Caregivers Survey in Greece Dr Paraskevi Sakka Neuropsychiatrist Chairwoman, Athens Association of Alzheimer’s Disease and Related.
Indianapolis Discovery Network for Dementia Comparative Effectiveness Research Trial of Alzheimer’s Disease Drugs: COMET-AD.
Curtin University is a trademark of Curtin University of Technology CRICOS Provider Code 00301J Gill Lewin and Kristen De San MiguelMay 2012 Personal Alarms:
Parents’ own best efforts at treating sleep problems in infants and toddlers Lynn Loutzenhiser, Ph.D. R.D. Psych Child and Family Research Group University.
® From Bad to Worse: Comorbidities and Chronic Lower Back Pain Margaret Cecere JD, Richard Young MD, Sandra Burge PhD The University of Texas Health Science.
Caregiving and the changing experience of leisure: A male perspective Rebecca Genoe, MA Candidate Dalhousie University Bryan Smale, PhD University of Waterloo.
Cholinesterase Inhibitors in a real-world coverage study Revised outline Introduction: measurement for drug policymakers and assessment tools for clinicians.
Trends in utilization of services associated with introduction of drug coverage for Cholinesterase Inhibitors (ChEI) Malcolm Maclure, ScD, Professor Wendy.
Critical Appraisal (CA) I Prepared by Dr. Hoda Abd El Azim.
UCL CAREERS SUCCEEDING AT INTERVIEWS KAREN BARNARD DIRECTOR, UCL CAREERS.
A Model for Facilitating Faith-Health Integration in the Church Affiliated Frail Elderly Joann P. Wessman, RN, PhD Nancy L. Olen, RN, EdD Bethel University,
Creative Ageing state of play Alice Thwaite Director – Development Equal Arts.
International Palliative Care Network Lecture Series 2014 under the auspices of the European Association for Palliative Care.
An evaluation of the online universal COPING parent programme:
Dr. Fiona Keogh Principal Investigator, Genio Evaluation of IHCPs
Marie Tarrant1, RN MPH PhD; Kendra M. Wu, BSc MSc MMedSc2 & Joan E
The ADTI CLIMAT (Clinical Meaningfulness in Alzheimer Disease) Study
Camden Memory Service a new model
Christine Fleming, PhD, CRC
Emilia Mondragón, BS, Young-Me Lee, PhD, RN, Helen Lee, APN
Interreg-IPA Cross-border Cooperation Programme Romania-Serbia
Presentation transcript:

What Caregivers Think of Cholinesterase Inhibitors Neena L. Chappell, PhD, FRSC Canada Research Chair in Social Gerontology University of Victoria Karen Kobayashi, PhD Associate Professor, Department of Sociology Research Affiliate, Centre on Aging André Smith, PhD Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology Research Affiliate< Centre on Aging Presented at the 26 th International Conference of Alzheimer’s Disease International, Toronto, March 27, The study is part of ADTI, funded by the BC Ministry of Health Services.

Caregiver Appraisal Study (CAS) PI: Neena L. Chappell, PhD, FRSC, CRC Co-Is: Karen Kobayashi, PhD; André Smith, PhD, Dept of Sociology, University of Victoria; Malcolm Maclure, SCD, B.C. Chair in Patient Safety, Dept of Anaesthesiology, Pharmacology & Therapeutics, UBC & Co-Director of Research, PSD, Ministry of Health Services, B.C.

Key Research Objectives Understand CG assessments of the effectiveness of ChEIs for patients and for CGs Compare CG subjective assessments with scaled measures (e.g., Zarit Burden, Rosenberg Scale of Self- Esteem, Pearlin Expressive Support) Compare CG assessments of effectiveness with clinical assessments by physicians Identify predictors of intention to institutionalize. Understand why these meds become terminated

Recruitment by Group CG to naive patients – benefit (T1 280; T2 261) CG to naive patients – indeterminate (T1 222; T2 212) CG to naive patients – negative (T1 21; T2 17) CG to non-naive patients (T1 251; T2 222) CG to those off meds (T1 44: T2 43)

Recruitment Sources Pharmacare Calls 1309 (59.8%) Physician Referrals 524 (23.9%) MOHS letters 146 (6.7%) Self Referral 204 (9.3%) Pharmacist/participant 4 (.2%) Total 2189

Data Collection Caregiver survey Semi-structured face-to-face interview (duration-1.5 hour) T1 = 6 months T2 (or exit interview at termination) = 18 months Triage interview at 6 months Narrative-based interviews with selected sub-sample

Multivariate Analyses No effect on CG outcomes, i.e., burden, self-esteem, anxiety No effect on hope/help scales Negative perception of meds on CG’s own mental health is related to increased CG burden and anxiety Perception of assistance required has increased since Patient on meds is related to increased CG burden Positive perception of relationship with Patient since on meds is related to increased CG burden and anxiety

Narrative-based interviews In-depth exploration of caregiver appraisal/experiences in the context of the caregiving relationship 25 caregivers 20 individual interviews (average = 1.2 hours) 2 focus groups (N=2; N=3) (average = 2.5 hours) Patient diagnosis: AD (N=17); vascular dementia (N=3); Lewy body dementia (N=1); dementia (N=4) Persistence: years (average of 3.2 years) Smith, A. Kobayashi, K. Chappell, N. & Hoxsey, D. (forthcoming). “The controversial promises of cholinesterase inhibitors for Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias: A qualitative study of caregivers’ experiences.” Journal of Aging Studies.

Hope and ambivalence Caregivers expected ChEIs to slow the decline of ADRD and improve memory Only 5 caregivers felt the meds had improved the CR condition; others were ambivalent “Oh, it’s working. I guess.” (Ian, husband) “I cannot judge what effects it has had as I do not know how she would have acted or behaved without it. How can I say?” (Peter, husband).

Possible interactions between ChEIs and caregiving context “I think he’s gained more confidence. Part of that is the medication and part of that is ‘OK, I have Alzheimer’s, I’m on medication, how can I go ahead and do something.’” (Helen, wife) “I think she improved. But it probably had to do partly with the fact that I was there more and that she had more interesting company. She wasn’t alone as much.” (Eric, husband) “I feel that there’s something that can help me. That makes a difference and it also gives you hope. I have something to lean on in the medication.” (Chloe, daughter)

Long-term persistence and discontinuation “If I were to have my way, I would probably have stopped the Aricept, but uh, a little doubt in my brain said, ‘No, it may be doing something. It may be doing something but I cannot notice.’” (Chantal, mother on ChEIs for 7 years) “So as a family, we’ve talked about it. Her decline over the last six months has been quite striking. If we stop the Aricept, it’s not going to kill her, but...with no brain, unable to function, not know anybody? Do we want to prolong this? So that was the deciding thing. And the answer is no we don’t want her on the meds anymore.” (Sheila, mother on ChEIs for 6 years)

Conclusions Positive perception of meds, yet no significant effect, either positive or negative on caregiver outcomes Qualitative data – little or no perceptible positive effect in patients yet CG unwilling to terminate (“just in case”, fear of sudden decline once meds are stopped) Reasons for long-term persistence and discontinuation warrant further investigation Important that we do not interpret caregivers’ positive perceptions as necessarily indicating a benefit for the patient

Policy conundrum Policymakers have a number of different audiences Caregivers have been an important political force, pressuring the government to cover these meds. Yet, the data to date do not provide strong evidence for such coverage.