Our dementia challenge: arise palliative care

Author:

Brennan Frank123ORCID,Chapman Michael45,Gardiner Matthew D.13,Narasimhan Manisha67,Cohen Joshua1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Palliative Care Calvary Hospital Kogarah New South Wales Australia

2. Department of Palliative Care The St George Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Faculty of Medicine The University of NSW Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Department of Palliative Care Canberra Hospital, ACT Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

5. Medical School The Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

6. Department of Neurology The Sutherland Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

7. Brain and Mind Centre University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractWhile many of the maladies of the 20th century are steadily coming under control, the march of neurodegenerative disorders continues largely unchecked. Dementias are an exemplar of such disorders; their incidence and prevalence continue to rise, in large part due to a steadily ageing population worldwide. They represent a group of chronic, progressive and, ultimately, fatal neurodegenerative diseases. Dementia has remained therapeutically recalcitrant. It is not a single disease, and because of that, we cannot expect a single panacea. While primary prevention rightly gains prominence, those with established disease currently require a shift in focus from curative intent towards improved quality of life. Enter palliative care. The sheer number and complexity of needs of patients with dementia, from the physical to the psychosocial and spiritual, necessitates the engagement of a wide range of medical disciplines, nursing and allied health professionals. One of those disciplines, as highlighted in the recent Australian Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety, is palliative care. This paper shall expand upon that role in the overall context of care for those with dementia.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference71 articles.

1. Australian Royal Commission on Aged Care Quality and Safety.A Summary of the Final Report.2021; 127.

2. Australian Royal Commission on Aged Care Quality and Safety.A Summary of the Final Report.2021; 92.

3. BrownL HansnataE LaHA.Economic cost of dementia in Australia 2016‐2056: National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling;2017.

4. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Cause of Death Australia. 2021 [cited 2022 Feb 24]. Available from URL:http://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/health/causes-death

5. Deborah ParkerJL GourlayK.Paper Number 43 – Palliative Care and Dementia. Dementia Australia Publications.2018.

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