Cargando…

Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study

BACKGROUND: More than 90% of dementia patients are cared for by their general practitioners, who are decisively involved in the diagnosis, therapy and recommendation of support services. Objective: To test whether special training of general practitioners alters the care of dementia patients through...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Donath, Carolin, Gräßel, Elmar, Großfeld-Schmitz, Maria, Menn, Petra, Lauterberg, Jörg, Wunder, Sonja, Marx, Peter, Ruckdäschel, Stephan, Mehlig, Hilmar, Holle, Rolf
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2996386/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21087474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-10-314
_version_ 1782193199019720704
author Donath, Carolin
Gräßel, Elmar
Großfeld-Schmitz, Maria
Menn, Petra
Lauterberg, Jörg
Wunder, Sonja
Marx, Peter
Ruckdäschel, Stephan
Mehlig, Hilmar
Holle, Rolf
author_facet Donath, Carolin
Gräßel, Elmar
Großfeld-Schmitz, Maria
Menn, Petra
Lauterberg, Jörg
Wunder, Sonja
Marx, Peter
Ruckdäschel, Stephan
Mehlig, Hilmar
Holle, Rolf
author_sort Donath, Carolin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: More than 90% of dementia patients are cared for by their general practitioners, who are decisively involved in the diagnosis, therapy and recommendation of support services. Objective: To test whether special training of general practitioners alters the care of dementia patients through their systematic recommendation of caregiver counseling and support groups. METHOD: 129 general practitioners enrolled 390 dementia patients and their informal caregivers in a prospective, three-arm cluster-randomized 2-year study. Arm A constituted usual care, in Arm B and C support groups and caregiver counseling (in Arm B one year after baseline, in Arm C at baseline) were recommended by the general practitioners. The general practitioners received arm-specific training. Diagnostic and therapeutic behavior of physicians was recorded at baseline. Informal caregivers were questioned in follow-up after 2 years about the utilization of support services. RESULTS: The diagnostic behavior of the general practitioners conforms to relevant guidelines. The procedure in newly-diagnosed patients does not differ from previously diagnosed patients with the exception of the rate of referral to a specialist. About one-third of the newly-diagnosed dementia patients are given an anti-dementia drug. The utilization of support groups and counseling increased five- and fourfold, respectively. Utilization of other support services remained low (< 10%), with the exception of home nursing and institutional short-term nursing. CONCLUSION: Trained general practitioners usually act in conformity with guidelines with respect to diagnosing dementia, and partly in conformity with the guidelines with respect to recommended drug therapy. Recommendations of support services for informal caregivers by the general practitioner are successful. They result in a marked increase in the utilization rate for the recommended services compared to offers which are not recommended by the general practitioner. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN68329593
format Text
id pubmed-2996386
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29963862010-12-03 Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study Donath, Carolin Gräßel, Elmar Großfeld-Schmitz, Maria Menn, Petra Lauterberg, Jörg Wunder, Sonja Marx, Peter Ruckdäschel, Stephan Mehlig, Hilmar Holle, Rolf BMC Health Serv Res Research Article BACKGROUND: More than 90% of dementia patients are cared for by their general practitioners, who are decisively involved in the diagnosis, therapy and recommendation of support services. Objective: To test whether special training of general practitioners alters the care of dementia patients through their systematic recommendation of caregiver counseling and support groups. METHOD: 129 general practitioners enrolled 390 dementia patients and their informal caregivers in a prospective, three-arm cluster-randomized 2-year study. Arm A constituted usual care, in Arm B and C support groups and caregiver counseling (in Arm B one year after baseline, in Arm C at baseline) were recommended by the general practitioners. The general practitioners received arm-specific training. Diagnostic and therapeutic behavior of physicians was recorded at baseline. Informal caregivers were questioned in follow-up after 2 years about the utilization of support services. RESULTS: The diagnostic behavior of the general practitioners conforms to relevant guidelines. The procedure in newly-diagnosed patients does not differ from previously diagnosed patients with the exception of the rate of referral to a specialist. About one-third of the newly-diagnosed dementia patients are given an anti-dementia drug. The utilization of support groups and counseling increased five- and fourfold, respectively. Utilization of other support services remained low (< 10%), with the exception of home nursing and institutional short-term nursing. CONCLUSION: Trained general practitioners usually act in conformity with guidelines with respect to diagnosing dementia, and partly in conformity with the guidelines with respect to recommended drug therapy. Recommendations of support services for informal caregivers by the general practitioner are successful. They result in a marked increase in the utilization rate for the recommended services compared to offers which are not recommended by the general practitioner. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN68329593 BioMed Central 2010-11-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2996386/ /pubmed/21087474 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-10-314 Text en Copyright ©2010 Donath et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Donath, Carolin
Gräßel, Elmar
Großfeld-Schmitz, Maria
Menn, Petra
Lauterberg, Jörg
Wunder, Sonja
Marx, Peter
Ruckdäschel, Stephan
Mehlig, Hilmar
Holle, Rolf
Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
title Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
title_full Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
title_fullStr Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
title_full_unstemmed Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
title_short Effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - Results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
title_sort effects of general practitioner training and family support services on the care of home-dwelling dementia patients - results of a controlled cluster-randomized study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2996386/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21087474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-10-314
work_keys_str_mv AT donathcarolin effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT graßelelmar effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT großfeldschmitzmaria effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT mennpetra effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT lauterbergjorg effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT wundersonja effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT marxpeter effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT ruckdaschelstephan effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT mehlighilmar effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy
AT hollerolf effectsofgeneralpractitionertrainingandfamilysupportservicesonthecareofhomedwellingdementiapatientsresultsofacontrolledclusterrandomizedstudy