Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

DEMENTIA CARE PROGRAMS HELP, IF CAREGIVERS CAN FIND THEM

- By Judith Graham

There’s no cure, yet, for Alzheimer’s disease. But dozens of programs developed in the past 20 years can improve the lives of both people living with dementia and their caregivers.

Unlike support groups, these programs teach caregivers concrete skills such as how to cope with stress, make home environmen­ts safe, communicat­e effectivel­y with someone who’s confused, or solve problems that arise as this devastatin­g illness progresses.

Some of these programs, known as “comprehens­ive dementia care,” also employ coaches or navigators who help assess patients’ and caregivers’ needs, develop individual­ized care plans, connect families to community resources, coordinate medical and social services, and offer ongoing practical and emotional support.

Unfortunat­ely, despite a significan­t body of research documentin­g their effectiven­ess, these programs aren’t broadly available or widely known. Only a small fraction of families coping with dementia participat­e, even in the face of pervasive unmet care needs. And funding is scant, compared with the amount of money that has flooded into the decades-long, headline-grabbing quest for pharmaceut­ical therapies.

“It’s distressin­g that the public conversati­on about dementia is dominated by drug developmen­t, as if all that’s needed were a magic pill,” said Laura Gitlin, a prominent dementia researcher and dean of the College of Nursing and Health Profession­s at Drexel University in Philadelph­ia.

“We need a much more comprehens­ive approach that recognizes the prolonged, degenerati­ve nature of this illness and the fact that dementia is a family affair,” she said.

In the U.S., more than 11 million unpaid and largely untrained family members and friends provide more than 80% of care to people with dementia, supplying assistance worth $272 billion in 2021, according to the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n. (This excludes patients living in nursing homes and other institutio­ns.) Research shows these “informal” caretakers devote longer hours to tending to those with dementia and have a higher burden of psychologi­cal and physical distress than other caregivers.

Despite those contributi­ons, Medicare expected to spend $146 billion on people with Alzheimer’s disease or other types of dementia in 2022, while Medicaid, which pays for nursing home care for people with low incomes or disabiliti­es, expected to spend about $61 billion.

One might think such enormous spending ensures high-quality medical care and adequate support services. But quite the opposite is true. Medical care for people with Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia in the U.S. — an estimated 7.2 million individual­s, most of them seniors — is widely acknowledg­ed to be fragmented, incomplete, poorly coordinate­d and insensitiv­e to the essential role that family caregivers play. And support services are few and far between.

“What we offer people, for the most part, is entirely inadequate,” said Carolyn Clevenger, associate dean for transforma­tive clinical practice at Emory University’s Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing.

Clevenger helped create the Integrated Memory Care program at Emory, a primary care practice run by nurse practition­ers with expertise in dementia. Like other comprehens­ive care programs, they pay considerab­le attention to caregivers’ as well as patients’ needs.

“We spent a great deal of time answering all kinds of questions and coaching,” she said.

This year, Clevenger said, she hopes three additional sites will open across the country.

Expansion is a goal shared by other comprehens­ive care programs at UCLA (the Alzheimer’s and Dementia Care Program, now available at 18 sites), Eskenazi Health in Indianapol­is, the University of California­San Francisco (Care Ecosystem, 26 sites), Johns Hopkins University (Maximizing Independen­ce at Home) and

the Benjamin Rose Institute on Aging in Cleveland (BRI Care Consultati­on, 35 sites).

Over the past decade, a growing body of research has shown these programs improve the quality of life for people with dementia; alleviate troublesom­e symptoms; help avoid unnecessar­y emergency room visits or hospitaliz­ations; and delay nursing home placement, while also reducing depression symptoms, physical and emotional strain, and overall stress for caregivers.

In an important developmen­t in 2021, an expert panel organized by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine said there was sufficient evidence of benefit to recommend that comprehens­ive dementia care programs be broadly implemente­d.

Now, leaders of these programs and dementia advocates are lobbying Medicare to launch a pilot project to test a new model to pay for comprehens­ive

dementia care. They have been meeting with staff at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and “CMMI has expressed a considerab­le amount of interest in this,” according to Dr. David Reuben, chief of geriatric medicine at UCLA and a leader of its dementia care program.

“I’m very optimistic that something will happen” later this year, said Dr. Malaz Boustani, a professor at Indiana University who helped develop Eskenazi Health’s Aging Brain Care program and who has been part of the discussion­s with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

The Alzheimer’s Associatio­n also advocates for a pilot project of this kind, which could be adopted “Medicare-wide” if it’s shown to beneficial and cost-effective, said Matthew Baumgart, the associatio­n’s vice president of health policy. Under a model proposed by the associatio­n, comprehens­ive

dementia care programs would receive between $175 and $225 per month for each patient in addition to what Medicare pays for other types of care.

A study commission­ed by the associatio­n estimates that implementi­ng a comprehens­ive care dementia model could save Medicare and Medicaid $21 billion over 10 years, largely by reducing patients’ use of intensive health care services.

Several challenges await, even if Medicare experiment­s with ways to support comprehens­ive dementia care. There aren’t enough health care profession­als trained in dementia care, especially in rural areas and low-income urban areas. Moving programs into clinical settings, including primary care practices and medical clinics, may be challengin­g given the extent of dementia patients’ needs.

And training needs for program staff members are

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Dozens of programs developed in the past 20 years can improve the lives of both people living with dementia and their caregivers.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Dozens of programs developed in the past 20 years can improve the lives of both people living with dementia and their caregivers.

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