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1.
Palliat Med ; : 2692163241265231, 2024 Aug 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39092850

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Many individuals with advanced dementia die in hospital, despite preferring home death. Existing evidence of factors affecting their place of death is inconsistent. To inform policies/practices for meeting needs/preferences, systematically establishing the evidence is pertinent, particularly given the exponential rise in advanced dementia prevalence. AIM: To identify factors influencing where people with advanced dementia die. DESIGN AND DATA SOURCES: This systematic review with meta-analysis was registered on PROSPERO (CRD42022366722). Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO, SocINDEX and a grey literature database, Overton, were searched on 21/12/2022, supplemented by hand-searching/citation tracking. Papers reporting quantitative data on factors associated with place of death in advanced dementia were included and appraised using QualSyst. Data were analysed using random effects with the certainty of evidence determined using the GRADE criteria. RESULTS: Thirty-three papers involving >5 million individuals (mean age = 89.2 years) were included. Long-term care setting deaths were relatively common but hospice deaths were rarer. Marriage's association with home death underscores social networks' importance, while younger age's and male gender's associations with hospital death demonstrate patients' and families' interdependency. Pneumonia/COPD's opposing effects on hospital deaths with cancer/functional impairment highlight the challenges of advanced dementia care. Unlike hospital/nursing home bed availability's lack of effect, capitated funding (fixed-amount-per-patient-per-period) decreased hospital death likelihood. CONCLUSION: This comprehensive review of place of death determinants highlight the profound challenges of advanced dementia end-of-life care. Given that bed capacity did not affect place of death, a capitation-based, integrated palliative care model would appear more likely to meet patients' needs in a resource-constrained environment.

2.
J Am Med Dir Assoc ; 23(7): 1248-1256, 2022 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34634231

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: To realize patients' preferences for home death, this study aimed to identify factors associated with family caregiver burden of home-dwelling patients with advanced dementia and examine its relationship with end-of-life care treatment decisions. DESIGN: A prospective cohort study. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Patient-family caregiver dyads enrolled in a home-based palliative care program for patients with advanced dementia, with family caregiver burden assessed using the Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI) on enrolment, were included. METHODS: Independent variables included sociodemographic data, patients' clinical phase, symptom severity, quality of life, informal paid help availability, and community resources utilized. Dependent variable was continuous ZBI scores and ZBI scores dichotomized into <24 and ≥24 for predicting depression risk. Place of death and interventions received 2 weeks before death were also collected. Data were analyzed using multivariate linear and logistic regression. RESULTS: From October 2014 to December 2020, a total of 377 family caregivers were assessed with ZBI. Median score was 25 (IQR 15-36), and 54.4% of them were at risk of depression. Younger family caregivers had higher ZBI scores (ß = -0.22, 95% CI -0.38, -0.07), with the depression risk doubling for family caregivers aged <60 years (OR 2.13, 95% CI 1.33, 3.43). Absence of informal paid help also increased the ZBI scores (ß = -9.04, 95% CI -14.86, -3.22) and depression risk (OR 2.50, 95% CI 1.03, 6.09). In addition, caregivers' ZBI scores increased with patients' neuropsychiatric symptom severity (ß = 0.49, 95% CI 0.08, 0.89), and caregivers of clinically unstable patients had a higher depression risk (OR 1.80, 95% CI 1.03, 3.12). Baseline caregiver burden was not associated with treatment decisions made at the end of life. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: Younger family caregivers caring for clinically unstable patients with severe neuropsychiatric symptoms experienced greater burden without informal paid help. For end-of-life care at home in advanced dementia to be tenable, relevant national agencies and stakeholders are recommended to work collectively to support family caregivers holistically.


Asunto(s)
Cuidadores , Demencia , Carga del Cuidador , Cuidadores/psicología , Costo de Enfermedad , Demencia/psicología , Humanos , Estudios Prospectivos , Calidad de Vida
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