A new one‐stop interdisciplinary cognitive clinic model tackles rural health inequality and halves the time to diagnosis: Benchmarked against a national dementia registry

Author:

Alty Jane123ORCID,Lawler Katherine14ORCID,Salmon Katharine1ORCID,McDonald Scott12,Stuart Kimberley1ORCID,Cleary Alison12,Ma Jak15,Rudd Kaylee1ORCID,Wang Xinyi1ORCID,Chiranakorn‐Costa Sigourney3ORCID,Collins Jessica1ORCID,Merl Helga1ORCID,Lin Xiaoping6ORCID,Vickers James C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre University of Tasmania Tasmania Australia

2. Royal Hobart Hospital Hobart Australia

3. School of Medicine University of Tasmania Hobart Australia

4. School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. I‐Med Radiology Network Hobart Hobart Australia

6. Monash University School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine Melbourne Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesUnequal access to cognitive assessments is a major barrier to timely diagnosis, especially for those living in rural or remote areas. ‘One‐stop’ cognitive clinic models are a proposed solution, but few such clinics exist. We evaluate the implementation of a new one‐stop State‐wide clinic model in Tasmania, Australia, where 27% of people live in rural/remote areas.MethodsA novel single‐visit protocol has been developed, comprising interdisciplinary medical and cognitive assessments, research participation, consensus diagnosis and management plan. A cross‐sectional evaluation was undertaken using the RE‐AIM (reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance) framework and results benchmarked against the national Australian Dementia Network Registry.ResultsOver the first 52 consecutive weekly clinics: Reach: 130 adults were assessed (mean age [SD] 70.12 years [10.31]; 59.2% female) with 40 (36.8%) from rural/remote areas. Effectiveness: 98.5% (128/130) received a same‐day diagnosis: 30.1% (n = 40) Subjective Cognitive Decline, 35.4% (46) Mild Cognitive Impairment, 33.1% (43) dementia and one case inconclusive. Adoption: 22.9% (156) of General Practitioners referred patients. Implementation: Nearly all ‘ideal’ diagnostic clinical practices were met and >90% of surveyed patients reported ‘good/very good’ clinic experience. The wait from referral to diagnosis was 2 months shorter than other national Registry clinics (78 vs. 133 days).ConclusionsThis ‘one‐stop’ model provides an interdisciplinary consensus cognitive diagnosis quickly and is well accepted; this may reduce health inequities especially for people living in rural/remote areas. This cognitive clinic model may be of relevance to other centres worldwide and also provides a rich data source for research studies.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology

Reference28 articles.

1. PrinceMJ WimoA GuerchetMM et al.World Alzheimer Report 2015‐The Global Impact of Dementia: An Analysis of Prevalence Incidence Cost and Trends;2015.

2. Why timely diagnosis of dementia matters;Commerford T;MJA Insight,2017

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