Post-diagnostic allied health interventions for people with dementia in Australia: a spotlight on current practice

Author:

Cations MonicaORCID,Radisic Gorjana,de la Perrelle Lenore,Laver Kate E.,Shepherd Karen,Methorst Fiona,Baldwin Emma,Maher-Norris Danelle,Gibson Joyce,Marsh Ebony,Brown Wendy,Palagyi Jaimee,Arndt Pamela Maryse,Vladcoff Kerri-Anne,Sabja Mariana Perez,Caruana Emily,Tung Jean,Doljanin Jessica,Anderson Jennifer,Brittain Jennifer,Comerford Lucy,Wharley Allison,McKenzie Erin,Wong Su-Min,Seeliger Megan,Delgado Vilma,Kaizik Cassandra,Kuo Katherine,Millen Anne,

Abstract

Abstract Objective The Clinical Practice Guidelines for Dementia in Australia provide evidence-based recommendations for the assessment, diagnosis, and care of people with dementia and their informal carers. The extent to which current Australian post-diagnosis care reflects these recommendations is not well understood. This brief report provides a snapshot of current practice related to three key recommendations from the Guidelines: occupational therapy, exercise, and informal carer support. Results Nursing (n = 3) and allied health clinicians (n = 29) provided data about 1114 consultations with people with dementia and/or informal carers over a 9-month study period. Results showed that delivery of evidence-based dementia care remains a significant challenge in Australia. Clinicians found it difficult to tailor exercise interventions to overcome cognitive and organisational barriers to adherence during and between consultations. Occupational therapists primarily focussed on functional assessment rather than on delivering evidence-based interventions. Clinicians also found it difficult to identify and address the array of needs reported by informal carers, especially when the person with dementia is present during the consultation. Though these results are reported by a selected sample, they emphasise the need for innovative knowledge translation strategies to facilitate widespread quality improvement in post-diagnosis dementia care. Trial registration Registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry 21 February 2018 (ACTRN12618000268246)

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council National Institute for Dementia Research

National Health and Medical Research Council Cognitive Decline Partnership Centre

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference24 articles.

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