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Improving access to services for people with dementia

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Majority of care for PWD and their carers ... Equality of access; individualised care2. Dementia services often culturally inappropriate for BME older people3 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Improving access to services for people with dementia


1
Improving access to services for people with
dementia
  • Joanna Murray
  • Institute of Psychiatry
  • Kings College London

2
  • Grant-holders
  • Sube Banerjee, Joanna Murray, Dinesh Bhugra,
    Andre Tylee, Peter Huxley
  • Research workers
  • Vanessa Lawrence, Kritika Samsi
  • Funder
  • Department of Health

3
Background
  • Majority of care for PWD and their carers occurs
    in primary care
  • Integrated health social care essential1
  • Enhanced role for memory clinics1 2
  • Early diagnosis fundamental1 2
  • Equality of access individualised care2
  • Dementia services often culturally inappropriate
    for BME older people3
  • 1NSF DH 2001 2Audit Commission 2001/2 3Social
    Services Directorate 1998

4
.more background
  • 10-15 PWD referred to specialist services but
    ethnic elders underrepresented
  • Ethnic elders receive diagnosis at later stage
    less likely to access treatment or social care
  • Diagnosis starts at home key role of families in
    pathways to care
  • Poor understanding of how cultural beliefs
    values influence presentation, help-seeking
    referral

5
PATHWAYS TO CARE in DEMENTIA
Self/ others recognise problem
Informal support family priest peers
GP identifies problem
Decision to seek formal help
GP offers acceptable explanation
Patient/family accepts treatment/support
6
Influence of beliefs on help-seeking
  • Lack of awareness of dementia
  • Normalisation of changes in cognition,
    competence personality
  • Stigma and shame of dementia, e.g.
  • - as divine retribution
  • - as a sign of filial abuse/neglect
  • Preference for informal care
  • Attitudes to services

7
Influence of health care professionals attitudes
  • Poor understanding of dementia among GPs, nurses
    social care professionals
  • Lack of clarity of GP role (e.g. screening,
    diagnosis, shared care, carer support)
  • Little research on professionals attitudes

8
Aims of the research
  • To investigate
  • the attitudes and behaviour of older people,
    their relatives, primary and social care
    professionals concerning dementia
  • the barriers and facilitators to accessing care
    and management of dementia
  • cross-cultural issues in presentation,
    recognition and treatment of older adults with
    dementia

9
Study Design
  • Individual in-depth interviews exploring
    attitudes, beliefs and behaviour
  • Vignette used to facilitate discussion of
    sensitive issues
  • Interviews tape recorded and transcribed verbatim
  • Thematic analysis by 3 researchers

10
Samples
  • Older people with a diagnosis of dementia
  • Family carers of people with dementia
  • Older people who do not have dementia
  • Primary care professionals (GPs practice
    nurses)
  • Social care professionals working with older
    adults

11
Recruitment
  • Purposive sampling for diversity
  • Participants recruited from secondary services in
    South London
  • Carer support groups, newsletters
  • Day centres for people with dementia
  • Gate keepers as links into the community,
    particularly for hard to reach groups
  • Religious cultural organisations

12
Interview Guide
  • 3 different interview guides people with
    dementia carers older people without dementia
  • Experience and attitudes towards memory problems
  • Understanding of dementia
  • Help-seeking pathway, service use and evaluation
  • Coping strategies and informal support
  • Caregiving role nature and attitude towards it

13
Vignette
  • Mr D is 75 years old. He has become very
    forgetful. He confuses peoples names, even his
    own family. He often seems unable to remember
    things from one moment to the next. Yesterday,
    when he went to the market to buy food, he came
    back with nothing, having forgotten what he went
    out for. He repeats himself in conversation.
    Sometimes, when he goes out, he gets lost and has
    to be brought back by neighbours.

14
Participants
  • 30 people with dementia (11 BC, 9 SA, 10 WB)
  • 32 carers (10 BC, 10 SA, 12 WB)
  • 28 older people without dementia (10 BC, 10 SA, 8
    WB)
  • 23 primary care professionals (16 GPs, 7 PNs)
  • 12 social care staff

15
FINDINGS
  • 1. Attitudes of older people with dementia

16
Attitudes to their condition
  • All participants explained memory problems in
    context of ageing
  • 1/3 believed it was normal this helped to
    diffuse fear, stigma isolation
  • Evaluated in terms of impact on valued roles,
    relationships, activities
  • Coping strategy focus on preserved abilities, on
    what they feel able to do or do not have to do
  • Tendency to minimise help needed - precludes
    self-help accepting support
  • But 1/3 reported negative effect on mood

17
Cultural differences in attitudes
  • Black Caribbean elders
  • identified themselves as independent
  • wished to limit reliance on family
  • valued support of their peers
  • more open about memory problems and more likely
    to seek help, BUT
  • fear stigma of deterioration in brain
  • fear about future support needs

18
Cultural differences in attitudes
  • White British elders
  • most likely to deny memory problems
  • embarrassed about memory problems so avoided
    interaction felt inadequate
  • concerned about becoming a burden or upsetting
    their spouse
  • belief that they were contributing to their
    marriage or ADL was beneficial

19
Cultural differences in attitudes
  • South Asian elders
  • less conscious of progressive nature of their
    condition less concern about future
  • confident and proud of family support
  • belief that they were contributing to their
    marriage was beneficial

20
Attitudes to GP
  • Majority regarded GP as supportive but useful
    only in accessing other services
  • Reluctant to impose on GP needlessly
    prioritise physical health problems
  • I suppose I should have gone to my GP but, as I
    say, she was doing quite well with all the other
    things. You cant expect too much. (WBD4)
  • I think its because of me thinking like,
    thinking of it as nothingPerhaps take it simple.
    Keep it simple. I dont look at it as a sickness
    perhaps (BCD10)

21
Attitudes to GP
  • GPs explain condition in context of ageing
  • Because the doctor say you are old now, old
    people you are, in an old stage now, everything
    cant be like a young man. You are old but your
    memory is all right. Keep everything all right,
    stay home with your wife (SAD5)
  • Sometimes reassuring but may lead to minimising
    or uncertainty
  • No shes never told me that Im demented but I
    know it is, because what I..I..I read about,
    about when youre forgetful and what not and what
    not. I said probably its that but theyre not
    telling me (BCD1)

22
Attitudes to medication
  • Some would take medication if offered because
    they trusted GP others feared side-effects
  • 6 currently taking medication for memory problems
    (2 in each ethnic group)
  • Circumspect but some positive appraisals
  • I think to myself that I am improving a lot, I
    think sobecause a couple of months ago I know I
    dont think I wouldI would finish talk long
    time..I would finish and get everything in a
    muddle and cant get my thoughts. (BCD3)
  • It helps to keep cold. cold, cold, brain to
    keep cold, not hot.dont think too much (SAD5)

23
Attitudes to day centres
  • Less embarrassment stigma being with others who
    have similar problems
  • I avoid going to people, especially former
    friends, unless I go to places where everyone
    has Alzheimers, all of them, everyone (SAD9)
  • Almost all BC elders valued being in company at
    day centres long-established coping strategy to
    maintain mental health
  • Most SA elders found day centres for PWD under
    stimulating
  • Few WB elders attended day centres preferred to
    avoid strangers

24
Attitudes to home care
  • Only one received personal care
  • Participants minimised the help needed
  • Services acceptable if they dont challenge
    valued roles (e.g. keeping a tidy home)
  • Some SA elders interpreted offers of help as
    implying they lacked family support

25
Attitudes to residential care
  • SA elders see them as irrelevant feel assured of
    family support
  • WB elders see them as alternative to imposing
    burden on their families
  • BC elders feared they might be a part of their
    future
  • Faint belief that some good care homes exist

26
  • 2. Attitudes of carers of older people with
    dementia

27
Care-giving ideologies
  • Two ideologies identified on basis of core
    beliefs about the role of carer
  • Traditional (17 9 SA, 5 BC, 3 WB)
  • care-giving is natural, expected virtuous
  • continuity, rewards, coping strategies, informal
    support, nature of role
  • less role conflict but guilt about meeting own
    needs
  • positive attitudes to services

28
Care-giving ideologies
  • Non-traditional (15 1 SA, 5 BC, 8 WB)
  • necessity not choice
  • conflict over roles expectations of life
  • relationship with PWD has been lost
  • life disrupted on hold
  • received less family support
  • more negative attitudes to services

29
Service implications of carer ideologies
  • Traditional carers
  • Asking for help was seen as failure only sought
    help in crisis. Services need to support not
    supersede family roles.
  • Non-traditional carers
  • Need practical support to protect other roles
    reduce sense of conflict. Help to understand
    nature of dementia reappraise relationship with
    PWD. Planning for future care.

30
Aspects of good care
  • Being listened to receiving a response to
    individual needs
  • Being assured of available help before its
    needed
  • Having one person to turn to with queries
    concerns
  • Early provision of information (non-traditional
    carers)

31
Fighting for help
  • Accessing services depended on the tenacity of
    carers
  • Both traditional non-traditional carers
    experienced it as a constant battle to get
    information, advice practical assistance
  • Decision to pursue services depended on whether
    the benefits outweighed the demoralising,
    embarrassing, stressful process

32
Carers attitudes to health care
  • Majority felt GP had done all they could others
    felt GP dismissed problems as normal part of
    ageing or untreatable
  • Most wanted rapid specialist referral but SA
    carers preferred GP to treat condition
  • Positive experience of CMHT assessment
    explanation of diagnosis valued access to other
    services
  • One to one CPN support most valued sense of
    collaboration reduced isolation

33
Carers attitudes to social care
  • Day centres valued for helping PWD especially
    being with others with dementia
  • SA BC carers believed PWD preferred to be with
    others of own ethnic group
  • Home help regarded as regrettable necessity
    staff were rushed, unskilled, inexperienced
    uninterested no relationship formed with PWD
  • Crossroads enormously valued everything home
    help was not (mature, capable, well-trained,
    interested). But fears it would change

34
Summary
  • PWD evaluate their condition according to impact
    on valued roles. Services should help preserve
    these roles
  • Embarrassment stigma lead to isolation
    socialising with other PWD those from same
    cultural group helps
  • Fear of deterioration requires early care
    planning
  • GPs role should be more than gate keeping
    minimising memory problems delays care planning
  • Carers with traditional non-traditional
    ideologies need individual approach from services
    (e.g. support, supplementation, substitution)
  • Carers appreciate detailed assessment,
    explanation, collaboration
  • Continuity is essential Crossroads widely
    appreciated
  • MORE INFORMATION NEEDED
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