Panel Study Investigating Status of Cognitively Impaired Elderly in Singapore
- Conditions
- Advanced Dementia
- Registration Number
- NCT03382223
- Lead Sponsor
- Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School
- Brief Summary
Dementia affects 10% of the elderly population in Singapore. However, there is a lack of systematic information regarding end of life (EOL) care received by patients dying with severe dementia (PDSD), PDSD's EOL direct and indirect costs and caregiver burden. This study, a first of-its-kind prospective cohort study in Singapore will assess the EOL care received by PDSD and PDSD's caregivers, EOL medical and social care costs of severe dementia and caregiver burden; and will develop a risk score to predict 6-month mortality for PDSD. The investigators will accomplish this by surveying caregivers of PDSD every 4 months till the patient passes away and 6 weeks and 6 months after patient's death during caregiver bereavement. The investigators will also extract and match patient medical and billing data with survey data for comprehensive assessment of care costs.
Key outcomes achieved by this study will be improved understanding of PDSD's EOL care, EOL care costs, and caregiver burden and bereavement. The systematic data collected will also lead to predicting 6 month mortality for community dwelling PDSD with greater accuracy compared to existing tools. Positive implications from this study will be improved early decision making by caregivers regarding EOL care and physician referrals for palliative care services; and a better understanding of EOL care for PDSD and PDSD's caregivers that will lead to cross-sector collaborations to improve delivery of palliative care to PDSD. In this way this proposal is highly responsive to the grant call which focuses on early decision making and cross sector palliative care delivery among non-cancer patients. In the long term, this study will improve clinical and public health policy and has the potential to be the foundation for future initiatives for dementia care and improved social and medical infrastructure planning.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 400
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in caregiver's resilience From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess caregiver's resilience through the abbreviated version of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC), the CD-RISC 2. Only 2 items will be adapted from CD-RISC. For each item, it is rated on a 5-point scale, ranging from 0 to 4 as follows: "not true at all", "rarely true", "sometimes true", "often true" and "true nearly all of the time", with higher scores reflecting greater resilience.
Change in quality of life of patient From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess the quality of life of patient by asking caregivers the list of comorbidities and acute medical conditions that patient has, patient's experience of symptoms, patient's functional status and behaviours that patient exhibits.
Total healthcare expenditure during the last year of life through analysis of medical bills From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will calculate total healthcare expenditure during the last year of patient's life as the sum total of expenditures incurred at in-patient clinics, out-patient clinics, and visits to emergency department and on prescription drugs.
Change in caregiver's awareness of prognostic information From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess preferences of caregivers for the disclosure of prognostic information of patient.
Change in caregiver burden From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess caregiver burden through modified Caregiver Reaction Assessment (CRA) Instrument. This instrument captures 5 domains of caregiver reaction and we adopted 4 out of the 5 domains. Each item is scored on a five-point likert scale, ranging from 0 to 4 as follows: "strongly disagree", "disagree", "neither agree nor disagree", "agree" and "strongly agree". We amended and included "not applicable" to the scale as well. The items constituting a particular domain are averaged to generate subscale scores. A higher score on the subscales indicate greater negative effects of caregiving in those domains.
Change in caregiver's ability to cope From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess caregiver's ability to cope through the BriefCOPE instrument. This instrument measures 14 conceptually differentiable coping reactions; each of which comprises of 2 subscales. The scale ranges from 0 to 3 as follows: "I haven't been doing this at all", "I've been doing this a little bit", "I've been doing this a medium amount" and "I've been doing this a lot". This measure does not compute the overall score. The scales are analysed separately to see what its relation is to other variables.
Change in resource utilisation for patient From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess the healthcare resource utilisation of patient and caregiver through modified Resource Utilisation in Dementia Lite (RUD-Lite) Instrument.
Change in quality of care received by patient From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess the quality of care received by patient by asking the caregiver of any use of tube-feeding, physical restraint and other medical interventions; as well as checking with the caregiver if they are satisfied with the care provided for patient.
Change in caregiver's levels of emotional distress From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess caregiver's anxiety and depression through the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). The instrument comprises seven questions for anxiety and seven questions for depression. Each item comprises of a four point (0-3) response category. Hence the possible score ranges from 0 to 21 for anxiety and for depression. A score of 0 to 7 for either subscale is regarded as being in the normal range, a score of 11 or higher indicates probable presence of mood disorder and a score of 8 to 10 is suggestive of the presence of the respective state.
Change in caregiver's grief experience From recruitment to death of patient (baseline, 4 month, 8 month, 12 month, 16 month, 20 month, 24 month) We will assess caregiver's grief experience through the MM Caregiver Grief Inventory- Short Form (MM-CGI-SF). The instrument consists of 3 domains (each domain has 6 items) with a total of 18 items. For each item, the scale ranges from 1 to 5 as follows: "strongly disagree", "disagree", "somewhat agree", "agree" and "strongly agree". The subscale is computed by summing up the scores of the 6 items for each domain. Higher scores may indicate a need for formal intervention or support assistance to enhance coping, while lower scores may indicate denial or a downplaying of distress or positive adaptation if the individual is not showing other signs of suppressed grief. The total grief level is computed by summing up the scores for the 18 items.The higher the score, the greater the level of grief experienced by the caregiver, vice versa.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Caregiver's perception of patient's quality of life at end-of-life, assessed after patient's death 6 weeks bereavement We will assess caregiver's perception of patient's end-of-life care after patient's death through the Satisfaction With Care at the End of Life in Dementia (SWC-EOLD) scale. The scale has 10 items, each measured on a 4-point likert scale ranging from 1 to 4 as follows: "strongly disagree", "disagree", "agree", "strongly agree". The total SWC-EOLD score is computed by the summation of all 10 items (range of 10 to 40), with higher scores indicating more satisfaction.
Caregiver's bereavement adjustment 6 months bereavement Post-patient death bereavement adjustment will be assessed through the Brief Grief Questionnaire. This is a 5-item interview instrument for screening complicated grief. For each item, the scale ranges from 0 to 2 as follows: "not at all", "somewhat" and "a lot". The total score is computed by summing up the score for each item. If the total score is 5 or more, it may be suggestive of the presence of the syndrome of complicated grief.
Cultural stigma associated with dementia Up to 6 months post-bereavement We will assess the cultural stigma associated with dementia by asking in-depth questions such as caregiver's perception of dementia before and after patient's diagnosis, caregiver's experience of outsiders' responses and attitudes towards dementia and how physicians give the diagnosis of dementia.
Trial Locations
- Locations (9)
Khoo Teck Puat Hospital
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Tsao Foundation
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Singapore General Hospital
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Institute of Mental Health
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Jurong Community Hospital
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
St. Luke's Hospital
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Alzheimer's Disease Association
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Care for the Elderly Foundation
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore
Changi General Hospital
🇸🇬Singapore, Singapore