Abstract
447 - Risk factors associated with sleep disturbance in a general elderly Japanese population: The Arao Cohort Study
- Kazuki Honda, Tomohisa Ishikawa, Ryuji Fukuhara, Seiji Yuki, Yusuke Miyagawa, Asuka Koyama, Yosuke Hidaka, Shuken Boku, Minoru Takebayashi
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- 04 November 2020, p. 167
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[Background]
Sleep disturbance is a common symptom in elderly people. However, the associated risk factors have not been completely clarified. We examined possible risk factors associated with sleep disturbance in a community-based Japanese cohort study.
[Methods]1521 community-dwelling individuals aged 65 years or older were selected from a consecutive series at a cohort study from 2016 to 2018 in Arao city, where located at south part of Japan. In this survey, the clinical valuables were collected as follows: age, sex, occupational status, education, lifestyle information, medical history, EuroQoL(EQ)-5D (a score of health-related quality of life [QOL]), Barthel index (a score of performance in activities of daily living), a score of Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) and a score of Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). Sleep disturbance was assessed by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (when the global score was 6 or over, sleep disturbance was determined to be present). Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to examine the association between clinical valuables and sleep disturbance. This research was supported by AMED (Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development) under Grant Number JP18dk0207025h0003 and has been approved by the research ethics committee of Kumamoto University. Informed consent was obtained from all participants and their family members.
[Results]Multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that Parkinson disease (Odds ratio[OR]=5.59), living alone (OR=1.93), liver disease (OR=1.89), hyperlipidemia (OR=1.36), higher score of GDS (OR=1.14), lower scores of both EQ-5D index (OR=1.11) and Barthel index (OR=1.03) were significantly associated as risk factors with sleep disturbance. Unexpectedly, lower score of MMSE was not a significant risk factor.
[Conclusion]These results suggest that several physical illnesses, solitude, depressive symptoms and lower QOL, but not cognitive impairment, might be crucial risk factors associated with sleep disturbance in elderly population.
448 - Euthanasia and Dementia
- Beatriz Jorge, Catarina Pedro Fernandes, Juliana Carvalho, Mariana Duarte Mangas
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- 04 November 2020, p. 168
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Background:
The practice of assisted dying is increasingly being discussed in a growing number of countries and is progressively regarded as a last-resort option for those suffering from severe and irreversible diseases. Recently, euthanasia in patients with psychiatric disorders and dementia has taken a prominent place in the public debate, since little is known about the prevalence and practice of euthanasia in these particular cases. Remaining a controversial subject, this study aims to describe the evolution and characteristics in reported euthanasia cases, focusing in dementia patients and the perspective from different countries regarding the nature of suffering, the voluntariness of the request and the role of the physician in the process.
Methods:A non-systematic review was performed, searching Pubmed/MEDLINE and Google Scholar for articles using the keywords dementia, euthanasia and assisted dying. Resultant articles were cross-referenced for other relevant articles not identified in the initial search.
Results:Physicians consider less likely to perform euthanasia in patients with dementia, compared to patients with a severe and life-limiting somatic illness such as cancer. Both physicians and members of the general public acknowledge difficulties in the assessment of the voluntariness of the request and the extent of suffering of patients with advanced dementia, considering that communication is compromised. While euthanasia on the grounds of unbearable suffering caused by dementia remains a comparatively limited practice, its prevalence has risen and is related to loss of dignity or the knowledge that the lasting memory of their loved ones will be of the decomposed version of oneself.
Conclusions:It is likely that the number of euthanasia requests from patients suffering from dementia and/or accumulation of health problems related to old age will continue to grow. The question of how policy makers and care providers should respond to these requests is, therefore, highly relevant, as welll as the development of practice guidelines, if medical staff is to respond adequately to these delicate requests.
449 - How much frequency do residents fall at nursing homes in Japan ? - THE JADE STUDY
- Nozomu Oya, Nobutaka Ayani, Akiko Kuwahara, Riki Kitaoka, Mio Sakuma, Tsuyoshi Morimoto, Jin Narumoto
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- 04 November 2020, p. 169
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Introduction
Japan has become an aging society rapidly, and the percentage of the population over 65 was about 28.1% (around 36 million people) in 2018 in Japan. Then, the number of residents in nursing home has been also increasing.
Many residents in nursing home are receiving pharmacotherapy, and drug-related falls are a major problem at the institution. Fall due to medication sometimes occurs and results in serious consequences.
Then, the aim of this study was to identify the incidence of falls and its association with medication.
MethodThe Japan Adverse Drug Event (JADE) study for nursing home is a series of cohort studies. The JADE study for nursing home is a prospective cohort study that was conducted at 4 nursing home for elder people in Japan.
Based on the validated methodology, trained psychologists, medical doctors reviewed all charts to identify ADEs (Adverse Drug Events, injuries due to medication), suspected to being associated with medication. Simultaneously, we collected all falls regardless of drug association.
After collecting these events, 4 medical doctors independently made a secondary review. This study was approved by the institutional review boards of the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine.
ResultWe enrolled 459 residents, which yielded 3315 resident-months of observation time. The mean (SD) age was 85.8 (7) years and 344 (75%) were female. We identified 655 falls in 196 residents (39.6%) during the study period (incidence: 16.9 per 100 resident-months). 568 falls (86.7%) in 166 residents were related to ADEs. Among them, 10.9% (62/568) were accompanied by injuries, and 2.6% (15/568) of them resulted in fracture. The most common class of drugs associated with falls was benzodiazepine hypnotics (23.2%, 132/568) and atypical antipsychotics (17.4%, 99/568).
ConclusionThe frequency of falls in nursing homes in Japan was comparable to other countries (L. Z, Rubenstein, 1996). Since significant portion of them were associated with medication, careful monitoring of medication is required.
450 - Exploring staff perspectives on the role of physical environment in dementia care facilities in Sweden and Canada
- Sook Young Lee, Lillian Hung, Habib Chaudhury
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- 04 November 2020, p. 170
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This study explored staff perceptions of the role of physical environment in dementia care facilities in affecting resident’s behaviors and staff care practice. We used focus group method (Krueger & Casey, 2000; Krueger, 1998) to elicit staff’s shared perceptions on the impact of the physical environment on residents’ behaviors and on their own care practice. A total of 24 staff members from four facilities, two in Sweden and two in Canada, participated. Discussions in the focus groups generated rich and inter-subjective accounts via dynamic and interactive exchange among participants. Participants were explained that the researchers were particularly interested in three aspects of the physical environment: architecture or spatial layout of the setting (e.g. corridor length, bath room size, etc.), interior design aspects (e.g. lighting, flooring, furnishing, etc.) and sensory aspects (e.g. noise, smell, tactile properties, etc.). Staff in both countries reported similar physical environmental characteristics that enabled and hindered them from delivering good care. This study yielded three environmental themes that have a substantial effect on the social interaction and care practice: design ambience, space arrangement, and sensory stimuli. The deficits in the physical environmental characteristics prevented staff from providing effective person-centred care. Our findings identified substantial differences between the facilities of the two countries, although it is possible that greater differences might exist between the range of facilities in each country about the quality of environment and care. The quality of environment contributed to a high job satisfaction reported by staff in Sweden. The unsupportive and problematic features of the physical environment seemed to be the primary factor that triggers agitation among the residents with dementia in Canada.
451 - Estimating “Brain Age Gaps” in patients with brain injury: Applying machine learning to advanced neuroimaging techniques
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- 04 November 2020, p. 171
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Introduction:
A single moderate or severe TBI is associated with accelerated brain aging and increased risk for dementia. Despite the high rate of falls that result in brain injury in older adults, numerous factors such as genetic predisposition to Alzheimer’s disease, sex, education, age are also known to affect multiple age-sensitive neuroimaging markers.
METHODS:Here we use the “brain age” metric being tested by the global consortium, Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA), that employs machine learning to predict a person’s age from multiple age-sensitive imaging markers (e.g., hippocampal volume, regional cortical gray matter thickness, intracranial volume (ICV)), while also taking into account their sex and educational level. We will discuss results from brain injured patients ( n = 60; age range: 20-75 years) and healthy age-matched controls (n = 20 (20-75 years). We will compute the “brain age gap” – between a person’s actual chronological age and that predicted from their brain scan – and test relations between this measure and injury characteristics.
RESULTS:In our pilot work, we predicted a person’s age from their MRI scan with a mean absolute error of about 5 years. ENIGMA’s current best model includes: (1) non-normalized brain volumetric measures as predictors including ICV, (2) separate models for males and females, (3) use of a large age range (12-80), and (4) Gaussian process regression (GPR).
CONCLUSION:This “overall” marker of accelerated brain aging offers a metric that taps diverse sources of information, weighted by their relevance to brain aging, and is associated with decreased functionality in older adults.
452 - Physical and Psychiatric Multimorbidity Associated with Prescription Opioid Use in Community-Dwelling Older Adults
- Carina D’Aiuto, Helen-Maria Vasiliadis
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 172
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Background:
Opioid use is particularly concerning among older adults. In Canada, those aged 65 years and older have the highest hospitalization rates due to opioid poisonings. Despite the current opioid crisis and the aging population, few studies have evaluated the factors associated with opioid use among seniors.
Objective:To examine the factors associated with prescription opioid use among community-dwelling older adults.
Methods:The sample includes 1657 people aged 65 and over recruited in primary care clinics from 2011 to 2013 in a large health administrative region of Quebec (Canada) and participating in the ESA-Services study, a longitudinal study on aging and health service use. The presence of chronic diseases was identified through self-reported health survey data and physician diagnostic codes (ICD-9/-10) from health administrative data. Psychological distress was measured using the Kessler Psychological Distress (K10) scale and dichotomised into low (scores 10 - 15) versus moderate, high, and very high distress (scores 16 - 50). Opioid prescriptions were identified using the provincial pharmaceutical drug registry for those covered under the public drug insurance plan. Sociodemographic variables were collected from the ESA-Services survey. Logistic regression analyses were carried out to examine the factors associated with opioid use up to a 4-year period following the baseline interview.
Results:31.9% of participants used opioids in this sample. Factors associated with opioid use included: female sex (OR=1.24, 95%CI: 1.01-1.53), annual household income of <$25,000 (OR=1.25, 95%CI: 1.01-1.55), level of social support (OR=0.85, 95%CI: 0.73-0.99), and presence of pain/discomfort (OR=1.66, 95%CI: 1.34-2.04). Furthermore, participants with ?3 chronic physical conditions also reporting anxiety and/or depression were 3.63 (95%CI: 1.83-7.18) times more likely to use an opioid than those with 0-2 chronic physical conditions and no anxio-depressive disorder. Moreover, those with moderate, high, and very high psychological distress were more likely to use an opioid than those with low psychological distress.
Conclusion:Our findings suggest that, among other factors, physical and psychiatric multimorbidity is strongly associated with prescription opioid use among community-dwelling older adults.
453 - The effect of ageing in personality and emotions
- Catarina Pedro, Mariana Duarte, Beatriz Jorge, Daniela Freitas
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- 04 November 2020, p. 173
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Introduction:
Personality and emotions have not been studied as thoroughly as cognition in old age. Recent research suggests personality changes across the entire life span, through middle age and even into old age. Thus, the previous assumption of stability in personality traits from early adulthood has been challenged and novel approaches to the study of personality development have emerged.
Objectives:The aim of this presentation is to describe the effects of the ageing process in personality and emotions.
Methods:A non-systematic review of the literature was performed on PubMed, PsycINFO and Web of science using selected keywords.
Results:When older adults compare their current and past selves, they usually perceive a subjective growth in personality. Descriptive research suggests that the big five personality characteristics (neuroticism, extraversion, openness, agreeableness and conscientiousness) remain generally stable over the lifespan, despite variations in life experiences. Some studies revealed age-related linear decrease in extraversion. One of the studies found that hearing impairment, already identified as a significant risk factor for social isolation, was related to this decline in extraversion. Although levels of neuroticism tends to go down over the course of adulthood, the increased vulnerabilities that accompany old age may amplify neurotic traits, increasing worries about physical health and memory, common features of depression in the elderly. Emotions, relative to more neutral knowledge and skills, increase in later years. Elderly have better control over emotions than do younger adults, they reason more flexibly about emotion-laden dilemmas and remember emotionally charged information better than neutral facts. Older people also rely more often on emotion-focused forms of coping, as opposed to active, problem-solving approaches.
Conclusions:Core features of personality seem to remain relatively stable throughout adulthood and any marked change in mood or social behavior may indicate a disorder. However, more subtle reordering of personal priorities and shifts in coping styles are common with normal ageing. The richness of emotional processing in older persons runs counter to the generally declining patterns seen in many cognitive and physical skills.
454 - Quality of Life: People with Dementia and Their Caregiver in Indonesia
- Martina Wiwie Setiawan Nasrun, Petrin Redayani, Profitasari Kusumaningrum, Hasya Layalia Lahino
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- 04 November 2020, p. 174
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Background:
As a psychological being, quality of life is one of the most important part to human. Many things could affect one’s quality of life, in elderly, Dementia is one of them. In 2013 approximately there were 960.000 people with dementia (PWD) in Indonesia. Caregiver who take care of PWDs’ daily activity have an important role and maybe prone to stress, guilty feeling, anger and sad due to hardship of caregiving the PWD. Therefore caregivers’ quality of life is substantial as PWDs’ quality of life.
Aims:This study objective was to know the relationship of quality of life people with dementia and their caregiver in Indonesia.
Methods:A descriptive-analytic study was conducted in RSUPN Dr. Ciptomangunkusumo Hospital Jakarta. Eighty four subjects were participated (42 PWD and 42 caregivers). PWD subjects were interviewed using questionnaires EQ-5D and severity of dementia measured using MMSE. Meanwhile caregivers’ QOL was measured using WHOQOL-BREF. Data was analyzed using binary correlation between PWD and Caregivers’ quality of life.
Results:There was no correlation of PWD physical health and caregivers’ quality of life. However there was strong correlation between quality of health PWD and caregivers’QOL notably in environmental domain (r = 0.839). And there were also a strong correlation between PWD severity of dementia and caregiver’s QOL inphysical domain (r = 0.946). Some of caregivers’ factor influencing quality of life were age (r = 0.805), duration of caregiving each day (r = 0.362) and experience of caregiving (r = 0.927)
Conclusion:Study found that the quality of health PWD had a strong correlation with caregiver’s QOL specifically in environmental domain.Internal factors related to caregiversQOL were age, duration of caregiving each day and experience of caregiving. Future study should be focused on objective measurement of quantify health quality.These findings suggest that caregivers’ quality of life also an essential part in managing dementia.
455 - Face to face vs. online cognitive stimulation for people with cognitive impairment. A controlled trial
- Blanca Martínez-Martínez, Raquel Escudero-Bonet, J. Antonio Garcia-Casal
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 175
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Introduction
It's been proved that cognitive stimulation has direct effects over the improvement of general cognitive functions in people with cognitive impairment. People older than 50 are progressively familiar with computers and mobile devices, opening an opportunity for computer based online cognitive stimulation programmes.
ObjectivesTo compare the efficacy of face to face cognitive stimulation (FFCS) with online home delivered cognitive stimulation (OCS) regarding adherence, number of sessions, cognitive function and mood.
Patients and MethodsParticipants were enrolled in a public memory clinic; 51 patients with cognitive decline were assigned to two groups: 27 received FFCS in a group format and 24 received OCS with the assistance of a carer. Both face to face and online interventions where designed and supervised by a trained Occupational Therapist. Pre and post assessments were carried out by a Clinical Psychologist with the Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE), the clock test, and the brief Geriatric Depression Scale. No differences were found between groups in age (69.65±9.74 years), cognitive function (MMSE=24.63±3.67), gender (55% women) and education. The treatment consisted of 32 sessions of CS held twice a week during 4 months.
ResultsData was analysed with nonparametric statistics and between group effect sizes were calculated. The FFCS participants completed 29.19 ± 1.73 sessions while the OCS group completed 26.00 ± 10.64 sessions (p < .000). All the participants in the FFCS group (100%) and 14 of the OCS group (58%) finished the treatment (p < .000).
Between group effect size favoured the FFCS intervention for MMSE (dc = 0.36). No between group differences were found for mood (dc = −0.5) or the clock test (dc = 0.13).
ConclusionsFFCS is better accepted by patients than OCS, with higher rates of adherence and less dropouts. FFCS leads to better results in the preservation of cognitive capacity.
456 - Viability of RUDAS as a screening tool for cognitive decline in primary health care settings
- Natacha Coello de Cunha Guimaraes, J. Antonio Garcia-Casal, Sofía Díaz Mosquera, María Alvarez Ariza, Raimundo Mateos Álvarez
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, pp. 176-177
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Introduction
Primary Health Care (PHC) has an essential role in the early detection of people with cognitive impairment (CI). Rowland Universal Dementia Assessment Scale (RUDAS) is a brief cognitive test, appropriate for people with minimum completed level of education and easily adaptable to multicultural contexts. For these reasons it could be a good instrument for dementia screening in PHC. It comprises the following areas: recent memory, body orientation, praxis, executive functions and language.
ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to analyse the viability of RUDAS, as an instrument for the screening of CI in PHC. RUDAS viability in PHC was checked, and it's psychometric properties assessed: Reliability, Sensitivity, Specificity, Positive and Negative Predictive Value were studied. RUDAS was compared to Mini Mental State Exam (MMSE) as a “gold standard”.
Patients and MethodsRUDAS was administered to 150 participants older than 65 years, randomly selected from seven PHC physicians’ consultations in O Grove Health Center. The test battery also included Katz, Barthel and Lawton Indexes, MMSE and the Geriatric Depression Scale. For each instrument administration time, difficulties perceived while administration and participant's collaboration were recorded. RUDAS was administered again within one month to assess test-retest reliability. For dementia clinical diagnosis, patients were classified following the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scale based on clinicians’ criteria and health records.
ResultsRUDAS application was brief (7,58±2,10 minutes) and well accepted. RUDAS’ area under Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve was 0.965 (95% Confidence Interval (CI) = 0.91-1.00) for an optimal cut-off point of 21.5, with sensitivity of 90.0%, and a specificity of 94.1%. RUDAS did not correlate with depression. Education, socioeconomic status and urban or rural context did not contribute any variance to RUDAS total score.
ConclusionsRUDAS is a valid instrument to assess CI in PHC. It is easily applicable and appears to be culturally fair and free from educational level and language interference in bilingual contexts. However, longitudinal studies to determine its sensitivity to change in cognitive function over time are needed.
457 - VERY LATE-ONSET SCHIZOPHRENIA-LIKE PSYCHOSIS… A DIAGNOSTIC DILEMMA…
- Joana Regala, Francisco Moniz-Pereira
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- 04 November 2020, p. 178
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Background:
The nosology and etiological underpinnings of very late -onset schizophrenia-like psychosis (VLOSLP) have remained controversial. This case report highlights its diagnostic complexity.
Case report:A 64-year-old woman, with a previous history of hypertension, diabetes, mild cognitive decline, right grade-4 hemiparesis as sequelae of an ischemic-stroke (three years before), started persecutory and partition delusions. After six months, the delusions were accompanied by complex visual hallucinations (scenic, lilliputian and holocampine), elementary auditory, tactile, olfactory, and gustatory hallucinations, causing a profound daily life impact, consequently she was hospitalized. Neither negative symptoms nor formal thought disorders were present. Electroencephalography and laboratorial evaluations were unremarkable (including thyroid function, folic acid, cyanocobalamin, infectious serologies and anti-gliadin/transglutaminase antibodies). Neuroimaging displayed subcortical microvascular lesions in the left centrum semiovale, bilateral thalamic and basal ganglia lacunes. Neuropsychological examination revealed mild/moderate impairment in working-memory, sustained-attention, executive functions, abstract thinking, and visuospatial abilities. Mini-mental state examination (MMSE) scored 20/30. Clozapine was started. As psychotic symptoms ameliorated cognitive deficits also improved (MMSE score: 25/30). She was discharged with residual symptoms.
Discussion:Late-life psychosis implies a thorough investigation, bringing about challenges in diagnosis. Several medical causes, including neuroinflammatory/immunologic, were ruled out. This two-stage progression, with partition delusions and multimodal hallucinations, in the absence of formal thought disorder and negative symptoms is typical of VLOSP. It is arguable to ascribe our patient’s psychosis to a previous vascular dementia or to VLOSLP. Almost half of VLOSLP patients may develop dementia. It is still debatable whether this propensity is a true characteristic of VLOPSL or reflects an initial misdiagnosis. Some neuropathological studies suggest a restricted limbic tauopathy underlying VLOSP. Notwithstanding, cognitive impairment is common in VLOSLP, including in those patients who do not develop dementia. Neuroimaging studies evidence that lacunar infarction in the basal ganglia alongside chronic white matter small vessels ischemic disease, may underlie the pathophysiology of psychosis via a disruption in the frontal-subcortical pathways. Nevertheless, cases of post-stroke psychosis usually resolve in few months. In conclusion, the neurobiological underpinnings of VLOSLP are complex and multifaceted. More systematized studies using biomarkers and neuroimaging are needed so clinicians can perform a more accurate diagnosis of VLOSLP.
458 - End-of-life decision-making capacity in an elderly patient with schizophrenia and terminal cancer
- C Kotzé, JL Roos
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- 04 November 2020, p. 179
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Medical practitioners are confronted on a daily basis with decisions about patients’ capacity to consent to interventions. To address some of the pertinent issues with these assessments, the end -of-life decision-making capacity in a 72-year old lady with treatment resistant schizophrenia and terminal cancer will be discussed.
In the case discussed there were differences in opinion about the patients decision-making capacity. In light of this, the role of the treating clinician and importance of health-related values in capacity assessment are highlighted. It is recommended that the focus of these assessments can rather be on practical outcomes, especially when capacity issues arise. This implies that the decision-making capacity of the patient is only practically important when the treatment team is willing to proceed against the patient’s wishes. This shifts the focus from a potentially difficult assessment to the simpler question of whether the patient’s capacity will change the treatment approach.
Compared to the general population, people with serious mental illness have higher rates of physical illness and die at a younger age, but they do not commonly access palliative care services and are rarely engaged in end-of-life care discussions. Older people with serious mental illness can engage in advance care planning. Conversations about end -of-life care can occur without fear that a person’s psychiatric symptoms or related vulnerabilities will undermine the process. Clinicians are also advised to attend to any possible underlying issues, instead of focusing strictly on capacity. Routine documentation of end-of-life care preferences can support future decision making for family and clinicians at a time when patients are unable to express their decisions.
More research about palliative care and advance care planning for people with serious mental illness is needed. This is even more urgent in light of the COVID-2019 pandemic, as there are potential needs for rationing of health care in the context of scarce resources. Health services should consider recommendations that advanced care planning should be routinely implemented. These recommendations should not only focus on the general population and should include patients with serious mental illness.
459 - Psychometric properties of the Geriatric Anxiety Inventory : A systematic review
- Philippe Landreville, Alexandra Champagne, Patrick Gosselin
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- 04 November 2020, p. 180
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Background.
The Geriatric Anxiety Inventory (GAI) is a widely used self-report measure of anxiety symptoms in older adults. Much research has been conducted on the psychometric properties of the GAI in various populations and using different language versions. Previous reviews of this literature have examined only a small proportion of studies in light of the body of research currently available and have not evaluated the methodological quality of this research. We conducted a systematic review of the psychometric properties of the GAI.
Method.Relevant studies (N = 30) were retrieved through a search of electronic databases (Pubmed, PsycINFO, CINAHL, EMBASE and Google Scholar) and a hand search. The methodological quality of the included studies was assessed by two independent reviewers using the ‘‘COnsensusbased Standards for the selection of health status Measurement INstruments’’ (COSMIN) checklist.
Results.Based on the COSMIN checklist, internal consistency and test reliability were mostly rated as poorly assessed (62.1% and 70% of studies, respectively) and quality of studies examining structural validity was mostly fair (60% of studies). The GAI showed adequate internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Convergent validity indices were highest with measures of generalized anxiety and lowest with instruments that include somatic symptoms. A substantial overlap with measures of depression was reported. While there was no consensus on the factorial structure of the GAI, several studies found it to be unidimensional.
Conclusions.The GAI presents satisfactory psychometric properties. However, future efforts should aim to achieve a higher degree of methodological quality.
460 - Unmet needs and loneliness perception among elderly people with chronic diseases
- Paula Pásaro Fernández, Sara López de Hierro Martínez, Cristina Beorlegui Bueno, Patricia Romero López, Miguel Municio González-Quijano, Montse Vergara-Duarte, Raimundo Mateos, Jorge Cuevas, Luís Cordeiro
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 181
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Introduction:
Unwanted loneliness is a public health issue due to its high prevalence among elderly people (20-40%) and its relation with morbidity and mortality. There is no clear strategy for addressing this problem given the diversity of needs and resources people with feelings of loneliness have.
Objective:Identify the needs and resources of elderly people with chronic conditions and feelings of loneliness by comparing the patient’s outlook with that of their primary healthcare professional.
Methods:Observational, cross-sectional, descriptive pilot study using theoretical convenience sampling at 5 health facilities in Barcelona (Spain), performed between October and May 2020. Of 159 people selected, 42 were identified to have feelings of loneliness (UCLA < 30) who agreed to participate in the study and their care needs were analysed using the Camberwell Assessment of Need for the Elderly (CANE) questionnaire. A descriptive and comparative analysis (Kappa coefficient and discrepancy percentage) of needs was performed using the outlook of the patients and their healthcare professionals. Data was analysed using SAS assuming a 5% significance level. A qualitative analysis was also performed to understand the relation between the feeling of loneliness and needs across 24 care areas (environmental, social, psychological, and physical). The study was approved by the IDIAP Jordi Gol Healthcare Ethics Committee (19/138-P).
Findings:The needs perceived focused on physical health, distress, companionship, and relationships (30% to 41.7%). Professionals showed a severe lack of knowledge regarding housing, home care, relationships, and social services (22% to 48%). The qualitative analysis revealed the relation between the feeling of loneliness and the irreversible losses of those close to the patient, along with insufficient support and understanding during the aging process, and feelings of abandonment and guilt. Meanwhile, other notable aspects include the need of independence and resistance towards starting activities requiring commitment and travel. Caring for others and mobility and sensory restrictions act as extra barriers.
Conclusions:This study enables the needs of people with feelings of loneliness to be identified. Discrepancies between them and their healthcare professionals were recorded, in turn providing direction regarding which areas need to be improved when designing patient-focused primary healthcare approaches.
461 - Social services for neurodegenerative patients and their families
- Nuria del Álamo-Gómez, Estrella Montes-López, Eva María Picado-Valverde, Amaia Yurrebaso-Macho
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- 04 November 2020, p. 182
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Introduction:
Neurodegenerative diseases (ND) are the most important cause of dependency in the world. The care of these patients is mostly assumed by their families. As a result, their family quality of life (FQoL) may be affected, decreasing their well-being, and modifying their habits and normal functioning. FQoL is a multidimensional concept, composed of different aspects that determine the life situation of each family, being these components both objective and subjective. Thus, the FQoL will depend on being able to access to support services that respond to the individual needs of all members and that this is adequate to adapt the environment and lifestyle to the demands of the disease. Public administrations are responsible for covering the socio-health support needs of people with ND and their families.
Objective:The objective of this research is to analyse whether the currently available social services are in accordance with the Family Life Quality model.
Method:A descriptive analysis of the support offered by the public services of the Autonomous Community of Castilla y León (Spain) to people with ND and their families has been carried out, analysing its correspondence with the dimensions of the Quality of Family Life Survey of Brown and collaborators (2006): health of the family, financial well-being, family relationships, informal support, support from care services, the influence of values, leisure and community interaction.
Results:The research results suggest that 1) most public services are aimed exclusively at the care of the person with ND; 2) these supports address the needs of the financial well-being, family relations and community interaction dimensions; 3) these are mainly aimed at supporting the situation when the illness worsens; 4) the limited specific services for families support them in the enjoyment of leisure and financial well-being.
Conclusion:The public welfare system of Castilla y León does not consider the family of people with ND as the target of its support services, but the person with ND declared as a dependent. Thus, it does not offer support services aimed at satisfying some needs linked to the dimensions of the FQoL model.
462 - Exploratory study of the adequacy and sufficiency of support for families with a member with neurodegenerative disease
- Estrella Montes-López, Eva María Picado-Valverde, Amaia Yurrebaso-Macho, Nuria del Álamo-Gómez
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 183
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Background:
Neurodegenerative diseases (ND) are chronic pathologies that generate great limitations and disabilities in the person and other effects on the Family Quality of Life (FQoL). FQoL is a multidimensional concept that includes health of the family, financial well-being, family relationships, informal support, support from care services, the influence of values, leisure and recreation, and community interaction. Several studies have demonstrated the impact that the absence of supports has on the FQoL.
Objective:This research aims to explore, from the perspective of social service professionals, to what extent the service supports available to people with ND and their families in the Spain-Portugal cross-border area are adequate and sufficient to contribute to the improvement of the FQoL.
Method:Qualitative methodology has been implemented. Specifically, a focus group has been conducted. Seven public social service professionals (five social workers and 2 community animators) working in the cross-border area studied participated in it. With the support of the Atlas.ti software and following a deductive coding model, the data obtained were systematically coded and interpreted by grouping the information into categories.
Main results:Initial research results suggest that 1) most of the support is exclusively aimed at the care of the sick person, even if it indirectly contributes to the improvement of the FQoL; 2) there are adequate support services for the improvement of the FQoL, but they are very insufficient; 3) formal support in the rural environment is limited by the characteristics of the environment.
Conclusion:Initial results suggest that the lack of access and inadequacy of support services in rural areas has an impact on the FQoL.
463 - Evaluating the Implementation of a Memory Clinic using the RE-AIM model. The experience of the “Memory and Neuropsychiatry Clinic” in Hospital del Salvador, Chile: Implementation of a Memory Clinic in Chile
- T. Leon, L. Castro, F. Mascayano, BA. Lawlor, A. Slachevsky
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, pp. 184-185
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The prevalence of dementia in Chile is 1.06 %, meaning that over 200,000 people are affected. In 2017, the Ministry of Health launched the National Plan of Dementia, which proposed establishing a range of health-care services from primary care to Memory Units (MU).
MUs have emerged as a new health care service composed of multidisciplinary teams with the goal of improving diagnosis and management of dementia patients.
The creation and implementation of a MU should take into consideration the organization of a particular healthcare system. In this context, the evaluation of a Chilean MU might provide information for the standardization and replication of such a health service on a regional basis.
The objective of this paper was to evaluate the implementation processes of a MU using the RE-AIM model, a multi-component model aimed to assist the evaluation of the implementation of ongoing programs.
Regarding “R” (Reach): from March 2018 up to June 2019, a total of 510 patients were referred and assessed at the Hospital del Salvador. Most patients came from primary care (51.9 %) and from outpatient services at the Hospital (39.2 %), particularly from the Neurology (63.3%) and Psychiatry (16.0 %) departments. We estimated that the MU assessed 5.39% of dementia patients living in the area of referral.
In relationship with “E” (Effectiveness): of patients evaluated by the MU, 60 (11%) were discharged. Of these, 41 (66%) were referred to primary health care, 9 (17%) to other outpatient services, 6 (10%) to a specialized mental health care center, and 4 (7%) to a daycare center.
Due to the short lifespan of our MU, no other RE-AIM dimensions could be evaluated yet.
This was the first evaluation of the implementation of a MU in Chile as part of the Chilean Dementia Plan. It showed that it is possible to implement a MU in a Latin American country and improve access to dementia diagnosis, management, and treatment. Ongoing challenges include continuing to collect clinical data, creating research projects as part of the MU, and developing a MU protocol that can be adopted elsewhere in Chile and other Latin American countries.
464 - SURVEY OF THE ADEQUACY OF HOSPITAL DISCHARGE LETTERS FROM OLDER ADULT MENTAL HEALTH (OAMH) WARDS IN A SCOTTISH HEALTH REGION
- Gary Stevenson, Sharon Munro, Connor McIntyre, Stephen Foster
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 186
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Background:
One form of communication deficiency leading to patient harm is failure to keep colleagues informed and to share appropriate levels of clinical information. The production of discharge letters is a clinical and professional requirement, deficiencies of which contribute to clinical risks, while failure to observe standards may be a focus of medico-legal enquiry.
Objectives:To examine the adequacy of clinical discharge letters from the OAMH inpatient wards in one Scottish Health region (Fife, population 370,000) against the 14-day discharge policy, with focus on medication advice and follow-up arrangements.
Methods:All discharge notifications from the five OAMH wards were examined retrospectively against the electronic records and case-files for the 7-month period ending 31st January 2020.
Results:169 discharge notifications inclusive of 14 deaths were reduced to 123 after excluding brief inter-ward transfers. Female:male ratio of 1.05:1; average age 77 (range 60 -99) years, average inpatient duration 120 (range 2-934) days. There was no identified discharge letter in 20.3%. Direct admissions from Care Homes died more often (30%) than those admitted directly from home (2%), presumably a reflection of greater frailty. 29% patients were discharged to (19% admitted from) Care Homes. 59% patients had dementia, 20% an affective disorder, 7% a psychotic disorder, with 20% having multiple diagnoses. Antidepressants were the commonest (49%) regularly prescribed psychotropic medication on discharge both for those with (47%) or without (52%) dementia. 32% of all patients (25% in dementia) were discharged on antipsychotics, often without advice on monitoring, prescribing restrictions or risks. The 98 verified letters took 27 (range 0-168) days to verify, 67% failing the production-time standard. 53% discharges had multiple follow-up arrangements. Variabilities were noted in letter production according to the discharge ward (range 53-100%) and between consultant teams (verification rates 50-100%) where delays ranged 6-109 days and ability to produce letters within the standard ranged from 0-92% (average 33%).
Conclusions:There appear significant failings in the timely transfer of clinical details between OAMH inpatient services and primary care services in this region that require intervention to minimise clinical risk and maximise patient safety. There were identified factors that are amenable to quality improvement.
465 - Research trends in simulated education in gerontological nursing by text mining analysis
- Miwa YAMAMOTO, Miho NISHIMURA, Yuki MORIKAWA, Yasuko MAEKAWA, Yoko MIYOSHI, Junko YOSHIMURA
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 187
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Purpose
The present study aimed to reveal trends in simulated education in Japanese gerontological nursing by conducting a text mining analysis of the Igaku Chuo Zasshi databank.
MethodsSimulated education is focused by field of Japanese nursing education in recently. Therefore, we searched for original articles containing the terms “Simulated education” and “gerontological nursing” which were published between 2014and 2019. Articles containing these terms, as well as thesaurus words in the articles, were analyzed using Trend Search. The analysis provided a conceptual map of related words, with the strength of the relationship reflected in the thickness of lines and the distance between them.
Igaku Chuo ZasshiA literature search was conducted using Igaku Chuo Zasshi, the Japanese medical literature database provided by the NPO Japan Medical Abstracts Society. This database comprises approximately 5000 journal titles and 6,300,000 articles.
Text mining softwareTrend Search is a commercially available software developed by FUJITSU. Articles were anonymized prior to analysis.
Ethical considerationsOnly anonymous articles were selected.
Results and ConclusionsThe search identified 15 articles. Mapping yielded the two wedges of [Learning] and [Simulated game]. The [Learning] wedge had three groups ( Introduce, Communications, and Aging ). Introduce refers to nursing processes via simulated patients or role play. Communications refers to practice in gerontological nursing. Aging refers to role playing with group works in fundamental nursing. The [Simulated game] wedge had two groups (Effects and On-the-job training). Effects refers to leaving bed or psychographics. On-the-job training refers to simulation of elderly because of understanding.
466 - Reliability“and Validity Study of the Thai version of the Pain Assessment in Advanced Dementia”(PAINAD-Th)
- Natthapapath Boonsawat, Patumporn Suraarunsumrit, Sahatsa Mandee, Sutisa Pitiyan, Napaporn Pengsorn, Varalak Srinonprasert, Titima Wongviriyawong
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 04 November 2020, p. 188
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Background: Dementia is a syndrome that affects multiple cognitive domains and causes functional decline. People with dementia (PwD) often experience pain, still could not report the symptom due to the decline in cognition that leads to communication problems. Therefore, pain in PwD is often underrecognized and undertreated. Many behavioral observation tools have been developed to help identify pain in PwD; the Pain Assessment in Advanced Dementia (PAINAD) scale is one of the recommended tools to evaluate pain in PwD. The PAINAD has been translated into many languages, yet not translated into Thai language. Since there is no pain assessment tool for PwD in Thailand.
Objective: This study aimed to assess the reliability"and validity of the PAINAD in Thai version (PAINAD-Th) for measuring pain in people with"PwD
Materials and Methods: The cross-cultural translation including forward translation and back-translation of PAINAD-Th were performed, then the content validity was assessed by the expert committee. Enrolled participants were inpatients aged 60 years or over, and had dementia with Functional Assessment Staging Test (FAST) of at least 6 which represented moderately severe stage. A research assistant recorded 5-minute videos of the participants, the first video was during the activity that could provoke the pain and the second video was at rest. Two trained nurses independently rated the pain of the participants by observing the videos using the PAINAD-Th to examine the inter-rater reliability and the concurrent validity of the test against the reference standard which was the numeric rating scale (NRS) rated by the expert committee. The same rating process was reproduced one week apart to explore the test-retest reliability.
Results: The content validity index of the PAINAD-Th was 1.00 and 0.93 (forward and back-translation, respectively)."The inter -rater and test-retest reliability showed an excellent intra-class correlation coefficient of"0.92 and 0.96, respectively. The concurrent validity was significantly correlated with the reference standard with an excellent intra-class correlation coefficient of"0.95.
Conclusions: The PAINAD-Th is a promising tool for pain evaluation in PwD as it provides an excellent concurrent validity against the reference standard. Also, it has excellent content validity, inter-rater, and test-retest reliability.