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PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS

The Integrated Memory Care Clinic (IMCC) at Emory Healthcare is a patient-centered medical home led by advanced practice registered nurses who seamlessly provide dementia care and primary care. This analysis explored predictors of significant changes in clients’ well-being and symptoms in clients’ f...

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Autores principales: Kovaleva, Mariya A, Higgins, Melinda, Jennings, Bonnie M, Song, Mi-Kyung, Clevenger, Carolyn, Griffiths, Patricia C, Hepburn, Ken
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6844864/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.425
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author Kovaleva, Mariya A
Higgins, Melinda
Jennings, Bonnie M
Song, Mi-Kyung
Clevenger, Carolyn
Griffiths, Patricia C
Hepburn, Ken
author_facet Kovaleva, Mariya A
Higgins, Melinda
Jennings, Bonnie M
Song, Mi-Kyung
Clevenger, Carolyn
Griffiths, Patricia C
Hepburn, Ken
author_sort Kovaleva, Mariya A
collection PubMed
description The Integrated Memory Care Clinic (IMCC) at Emory Healthcare is a patient-centered medical home led by advanced practice registered nurses who seamlessly provide dementia care and primary care. This analysis explored predictors of significant changes in clients’ well-being and symptoms in clients’ first-year experience at the IMCC (N=42 caregivers, three assessments over nine months). The significant changes were decreases in caregivers’ distress regarding PLWDs’ delusions (Delusions-Distress) and PLWDs’ anxiety (Anxiety-Distress), and in PLWDs’ severity of delusions, depression, and total symptom severity. Mixed linear models were used to determine significant predictors among baseline sociodemographic characteristics that correlated significantly with outcomes that changed significantly over time. Caregivers not employed outside home had lower baseline Delusions-Distress (p=0.006) and slower decline in Delusions-Distress (p=0.015). The longer PLWD needed care, the lower baseline Delusions-Distress caregivers reported (p=0.023). Caregivers not living with their PLWD reported higher baseline Anxiety-Distress (p=0.016). Caregivers not employed outside home reported lower baseline Delusions-Severity for their PLWD (p=0.006). Caregivers not employed outside home reported PLWDs’ lower baseline depression severity (p=0.026). Older caregivers reported PLWDs’ lower baseline total symptom severity (p=0.002). Increase in caregiver’s age was associated with PLWDs’ higher total symptom severity (p=0.049). For PLWD with male caregivers, total baseline symptom severity was lower compared to PLWD with female caregivers (p=0.01). These findings highlight that PLWDs’ illness duration and caregivers’ employment status, living arrangement, age, and gender may determine their perception of their PLWDs’ symptoms. Clinicians may individualize caregiver education with the knowledge of such predictors.
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spelling pubmed-68448642019-11-21 PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS Kovaleva, Mariya A Higgins, Melinda Jennings, Bonnie M Song, Mi-Kyung Clevenger, Carolyn Griffiths, Patricia C Hepburn, Ken Innov Aging Session 850 (Poster) The Integrated Memory Care Clinic (IMCC) at Emory Healthcare is a patient-centered medical home led by advanced practice registered nurses who seamlessly provide dementia care and primary care. This analysis explored predictors of significant changes in clients’ well-being and symptoms in clients’ first-year experience at the IMCC (N=42 caregivers, three assessments over nine months). The significant changes were decreases in caregivers’ distress regarding PLWDs’ delusions (Delusions-Distress) and PLWDs’ anxiety (Anxiety-Distress), and in PLWDs’ severity of delusions, depression, and total symptom severity. Mixed linear models were used to determine significant predictors among baseline sociodemographic characteristics that correlated significantly with outcomes that changed significantly over time. Caregivers not employed outside home had lower baseline Delusions-Distress (p=0.006) and slower decline in Delusions-Distress (p=0.015). The longer PLWD needed care, the lower baseline Delusions-Distress caregivers reported (p=0.023). Caregivers not living with their PLWD reported higher baseline Anxiety-Distress (p=0.016). Caregivers not employed outside home reported lower baseline Delusions-Severity for their PLWD (p=0.006). Caregivers not employed outside home reported PLWDs’ lower baseline depression severity (p=0.026). Older caregivers reported PLWDs’ lower baseline total symptom severity (p=0.002). Increase in caregiver’s age was associated with PLWDs’ higher total symptom severity (p=0.049). For PLWD with male caregivers, total baseline symptom severity was lower compared to PLWD with female caregivers (p=0.01). These findings highlight that PLWDs’ illness duration and caregivers’ employment status, living arrangement, age, and gender may determine their perception of their PLWDs’ symptoms. Clinicians may individualize caregiver education with the knowledge of such predictors. Oxford University Press 2019-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6844864/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.425 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Session 850 (Poster)
Kovaleva, Mariya A
Higgins, Melinda
Jennings, Bonnie M
Song, Mi-Kyung
Clevenger, Carolyn
Griffiths, Patricia C
Hepburn, Ken
PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS
title PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS
title_full PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS
title_fullStr PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS
title_full_unstemmed PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS
title_short PREDICTORS OF CHANGES IN WELL-BEING AMONG THE INTEGRATED MEMORY CARE CLINIC CLIENTS
title_sort predictors of changes in well-being among the integrated memory care clinic clients
topic Session 850 (Poster)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6844864/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.425
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