What do I need to do? How am I
going to understand what Deb's condition is about? What does it mean? What does
it mean for both of us? What support do we need? What intervention do we need?
Where can I get it? How much does it cost?[1]
Chapter 6 Post-diagnosis
6.1
As discussed in Chapter 4, early or timely diagnosis is the key to
improving the quality of life, independence and social engagement of a person
with dementia, and supporting those who care for them.
6.2
However, the Committee was told that without timely intervention, there
is no benefit to early diagnosis of dementia.[2] Diagnosis must be seen as
a first step that connects people to support and services which help them to
live with their condition.[3] As HammondCare submitted:
It is crucial that any strategy or policy to promote early
diagnosis of dementia be matched by an equal effort to provide timely and
appropriate assistance and guidance.[4]
6.3
Baptcare considered that a person’s quality of life and independence
could be improved greatly if dementia treatment and support was provided in a
timely, person-centred way, involving a collaboration between health care
providers:
Quality of life and independence can be considerably enhanced
if an early diagnosis is achieved and treatment commenced in a timely manner.
However this needs to be undertaken in a person-centred holistic context. The
current approach to dementia care is still quite fragmented with diagnosis,
treatment and service provision often undertaken separately and without any
collaboration between health care providers.[5]
6.4
The Committee heard that once a diagnosis of dementia was made, the pathway
to accessing appropriate treatment and support could be complex, confusing and
frustrating. A diagnosis was often met with shock and confusion about what the future
held for a person with dementia and their family. Mr Fred Tanner, a carer,
outlined some of the questions raised by a diagnosis:
… How am I going to understand what Deb's condition is about?
What does it mean? What does it mean for both of us? What support do we need?
What intervention do we need? Where can I get it? How much does it cost? Can I
continue to work? Do I go and become a full-time carer, as a number of my very
close friends have done in similar positions? How long will I do this for? I
did not know. I was not even 50 at the time. So all those sorts of things were
there, and then there was the question of cost. I do not just mean financial
costs; I mean emotional costs, social costs—all those sorts of things. And
also, more importantly, from my perspective, there was more about my wife. How
was she coping with all this? How was Deb coping? She is a pretty strong woman,
but this, I think, created lots of dilemma.[6]
6.5
A person’s post-diagnosis experience will undoubtedly shape their
quality of life, level of independence, and ability to remain engaged with
their community.
6.6
This chapter discusses the post-diagnosis pathway for people with
dementia and their carers, with a focus on how early intervention of dementia
may assist to:
n Improve a person’s
quality of life and help them remain independent for as long as possible; and
n Increase their opportunities
for continued social engagement and community participation.
Committee comment
6.7
From the evidence before the Committee, it is evident that the pathway
from diagnosis to treatment of dementia varies according to a person’s individual
needs and the resources and services available to them (and their carers).
6.8
This chapter illustrates some of the experiences and common issues
associated with life following a diagnosis of dementia, as shared during the course
of the inquiry.
6.9
The Committee has not attempted to cover the field of issues associated
with pathways of care for people with dementia and their carers. The Committee
acknowledges that each person’s experience of the aged/disability care system
and the pathway from diagnosis to treatment and support is different.
6.10
The focus of the inquiry is how early diagnosis and intervention can
improve the quality of life of a person with dementia and their family.
Discussion in this chapter is therefore limited to the predominant issues
experienced at the early stages of treatment for dementia, in cities and in regional,
rural and remote areas. The nature of residential care or palliative care is
not discussed in any detail, as this is outside of the terms of reference.
Referral pathways
6.11
The pathway from diagnosis to appropriate care and support must be
timely and user-friendly for early or timely diagnosis to be beneficial. As a
person’s care and support needs change, additional or alternate services must
be available and accessible, to meet that person’s changing needs.
6.12
The Committee was told that people had difficulty navigating and
accessing the referral pathway, due to a lack of coordination between services,
and a lack of assistance and information about available services and support.
Navigating the pathway
6.13
Both consumers and service-providers told the Committee that the pathway
from diagnosis to care and support was complex and varied nationally, which made
it difficult to identify consistent referral pathways.[7]
6.14
Benetas submitted that information about available dementia services was
often provided at the time of diagnosis, making the information difficult to
process. They suggested that best practice would be to schedule a follow up
meeting after diagnosis:
Too often information about dementia is given at the same
time of the diagnosis, but we have found that people often cannot take in this
information as they are still shocked by the diagnosis. As a result health
professionals need to ensure another consultation is arranged where they can
sit with the person with dementia and family and provide the necessary
information about dementia. An excellent model for this approach is that of the
Cognitive and Dementia Memory Services (CDAMS) where a follow up meeting is
arranged approximately four weeks after the initial diagnosis to discuss future
planning.[8]
6.15
CDAMS noted that people who have been diagnosed at an earlier stage are
sometimes not ready for, or in need of services at the point of diagnosis. Rather,
they need to be linked in with services at an appropriate time in the future:
…with earlier diagnosis clients and families are often not
ready for or in need of services at the point of diagnosis apart from some
initial education and information. This group is perhaps more at risk than
those that are diagnosed further along the dementia pathway and linked to the
service system at the point of diagnosis. They often tend to manage alone
initially and, apart from some possible contact with their GP, are not
connected to the service system. Information, provided at the time of
diagnosis, about available supports and contacts, can be lost during this time
and they often remain outside the service system until a crisis occurs.[9]
6.16
Alzheimer’s Australia (Victoria) advised of the difficulties a consumer
had in processing information once a diagnosis was made:
(Robyn, cares for her mother with Alzheimer’s Disease):
Once diagnosed she was dismissed. I was given an A4 envelope of about 100
brochures and we were shown the door. It did turn out that some of those
brochures were important – like the one introducing us to AAV (Alzheimer’s Australia
(Victoria)), but it looked like a pile of junk mail so I ‘filed’ it. It also
took me about 2 more years to find out there were services that specialized in
dementia care and also about HACC (Home and Community Care), CACPs (Community
Aged Care Package) etc.[10]
6.17
Mrs Helen Little, a carer, agreed that she did not know what to do or
where to turn, once a diagnosis was given to her husband:
Having had the diagnosis I was in the same situation. When
you are given the diagnosis, what do you do? Where do you go? What services are
available to you? There is really nothing that is on a bit of paper that says,
'Well, you could have this, this and this.' Largely I found that the things I
came to know were just from word of mouth or somebody saying to me, 'Have you
thought of ringing these people, contacting this agency?' I contacted
Alzheimer's. I found Carers ACT were extremely helpful.
As I speak to you, I am still not completely sure what is out
there. I guess, in a sense, I feel it would be useful for people in my
situation to have something that was more straightforward put to them as to the
number of services that are available. [11]
6.18
Another carer, Mrs Joy Whitehorn, told the Committee that it took six
years to obtain an ACAT[12] assessment for her
husband, which was needed to access certain services. She said the paperwork
required to access services was onerous and daunting:
In the end there were tears on my behalf and begging. I badly
needed assistance with night-time care. I am eligible for six weeks, but I could
not get that without an ACAT; I could not get the ACAT. So you are in no-man's
land. I eventually got the ACAT. When the paperwork came out, according to them
I had been waiting for 12 months, so something was not quite right there.
Looking at residential care, we badly need paperwork to be standardised. It is
a jungle. Every facility appears to have different needs in paperwork; there
are different forms. This is so time-consuming. A carer is so time poor and, in
a lot of cases, sleep deprived. To be told that we need to put our names down
in probably 10 different places to try and get into residential care is so
daunting, especially with the paperwork.[13]
Committee comment
6.19
The Committee acknowledges that when people first receive a diagnosis of
dementia, it is a difficult time, both for them, and their family or close
friends.
6.20
A diagnosis may come as a shock, which may make it difficult for a
person to digest information about what services they can access for care and
support.
6.21
For others, who are diagnosed in the early stages of dementia, the need
for services may not be immediate. There is a risk these people will not be
followed up at an appropriate time, when they are in need of support.
6.22
The Committee heard that once a diagnosis is given, information is often
provided to a person in a passive way, by a General Practitioner (GP) or other
service handing a person (or their carer) a number of brochures or fact sheets
informing a person where they might receive further treatment and support.
6.23
The Committee notes that as part of the Living Longer. Living Better.
aged care reforms, $198.2 million is to be allocated to build a gateway to
aged care services. This includes the launch of a ‘My Aged Care’ website (www.agedcare.gov.au)
and national call centre to give people one main entry point into the aged care
system and access to all of the information they need.
6.24
These proposed reforms will likely assist in providing a clearer access
point for dementia care services.
6.25
To avoid people falling through the cracks of accessing services, the
Committee is of the view that there should be system in place whereby people
are followed up, from the point of diagnosis and throughout progression of the
condition.
6.26
The Committee heard evidence from a number of individuals with dementia
and their carers, regarding the need for a ‘real person’ to provide
face-to-face case management throughout the course of their condition. This
proposal is discussed in more detail below. The need for follow up is discussed
in that context.
Referral process
6.27
The Committee was told that one of the barriers to receiving appropriate
dementia care and support was the lack of referral from GPs to specialists or
community care, once a diagnosis was given.
6.28
Mr Glenn Stoll, of ECH Inc, an aged care service provider, considered
that an integrated approach to dementia care was needed to guide people through
the referral pathways:
We need a more integrated approach so when people come into
that system, as fragmented as it is now, it may be a little bit more connected
so that we would be referring across or linking people together into a pathway
of service, as opposed to it being a little bit ad hoc and indiscriminate, as
it is at the moment.[14]
6.29
The Committee was told that GPs and other health professionals needed
clear practice guidelines and information about local pathways to assist them
to direct people to appropriate support and care, following a diagnosis.
6.30
Alzheimer’s Australia submitted that one means of achieving this was to
create contextualised clinical practice guidelines, utilising Medicare Locals
or the Australian General Practice Network (AGPN) to develop and promote the
pathways.[15]
6.31
The AGPN agreed there was a lack of clear guidelines available for GPs
to provide appropriate referrals:
Evidence suggests that many GPs are not aware of diagnostic
guidelines for dementia and that in many cases there are not clearly
established care pathways relevant to the local context. Associated with this
is often poor integration of general practice with other relevant primary
health care and specialist services and limited awareness amongst GPs and PNs
of locally-available support services and resources. This can mean that care
provided does not follow best practice care pathways and may be poorly
coordinated, with patients and their carers missing out on needed or
potentially beneficial care and support.[16]
6.32
It was noted that the single guideline created for the management of
dementia in general practice was out-of-date and not widely used.[17]
6.33
Alzheimer’s Australia noted in a subsequent submission that the guidelines
are being revised through a project funded by the Dementia Collaborative
Research Centre (DCRC) for Assessment and Better Care.[18]
The DCRCs are discussed in more detail in Chapter 7.
Committee comment
6.34
The Committee notes evidence suggesting that one barrier to achieving
early intervention of dementia is the lack of referrals provided by GPs to
specialists or other pathways of care, following a diagnosis. Another major
barrier, the lack of awareness regarding dementia, is discussed in
Chapter 3.
6.35
One means of assisting GPs make appropriate referrals following a
diagnosis of dementia is to provide GPs with clear practice guidelines, which
are relevant to the local context.
6.36
The Committee notes a project currently underway through the DCRC to
update the dementia guidelines for general practice.
6.37
The Committee supports this project and proposes that the Commonwealth,
in consultation with Medicare Locals or other local health care networks,
ensure that the guidelines are contextualised to provide relevant information
on local pathways.
Recommendation 10 |
6.38
|
The Australian Government Department
of Health and Ageing complete and promote practice guidelines for the care of
dementia in general practice (or primary care). In consultation with Medicare
Locals or other such local health networks, these guidelines should be
contextualised and provide information on local dementia care pathways,
including information on future planning services, such as legal services.
|
Coordinating pathways
6.39
The Committee heard there was a lack of coordination between the
diagnostic services or medical professionals who made a diagnosis of dementia,
and the service providers who delivered treatment and support once a diagnosis
was made.[19] There was a call to
establish clearer pathways for people to access appropriate support and care in
a timely way, following a diagnosis.
6.40
Associate Professor Scott Whyte, of Central Coast Local Health Network,
told the Committee that people were often not linked in with services once they
were given a diagnosis:
I think the real issue and problem with dementia,
particularly with young people, is that they get sent down to Sydney for a
diagnosis and that is where it stops. We pick them up years later as everything
fails. They have not been linked in with local services. One really important thing
is to keep people on the coast, and not just to give them a diagnosis but to
link them up with the community services.[20]
6.41
The Committee was told that one method of better coordinating local
pathways of care would be to utilise Medicare Locals.
6.42
The Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA) advised that Medicare Locals were
improving the coordination and integration of primary health care in local
communities and helping people navigate the local system, by better linking
local GPs, nursing, allied health and other health professionals, hospitals and
aged care, and maintaining up to date local service directories.[21]
6.43
Ms Lisa Rollinson, of the Brotherhood of St Laurence, asserted that
Medicare Locals could be used effectively to coordinate and manage dementia services
in the primary care sector:
Medicare Locals are well placed to facilitate and coordinate dementia
care in the primary health arena, with partnerships with local experts in the
community field. Currently dementia diagnosis and referral is managed through
the acute and subacute sectors by a specialised memory clinic and ACAT. Clients
and carers will be much better served through the service coordination and
primary health focus to be provided through the Medicare Locals and the
community health sector.[22]
6.44
AGPN agreed that Medicare Locals, or other existing primary health care
networks charged with regional primary health care coordination, were well
placed to facilitate greater integration and networking of local primary and
specialist health services, and social care and support services. AGPN
submitted that this networking would ensure people living with dementia and
their families accessed comprehensive and well-coordinated care that optimised
the potential benefit of local services.[23]
6.45
Mr Rees considered how Medicare Locals might be used to link people in
to services once they obtained a diagnosis:
It is, firstly, important to establish the principles that
should govern the system. What should you look for across Australia in terms of
the main characteristics of any system? That is important. But given the
diversity of service provision in Australia, it would be very hard to have a
very consistent system view across Australia. I would go back to one of the
points that I made at the outset that, whether it is through Medicare Locals or
through some other system, we would look to develop regional or local pathways
that local professionals could follow. They might be quite different from area
to area, depending on health infrastructure. That is where we got to with our
stakeholder group and that seems to me to be the sort of approach that one
should take.[24]
6.46
Mr Mark Booth, of DoHA, explained how Medicare Locals were already being
utilised to develop local pathways in dementia care:
… Medicare Locals are tasked with looking at two things. One
is that care coordination work to ensure that, from a patient perspective,
patients can have an easy journey through care. The second one is really that
notion of looking at the health needs of the community that they cover. So they
do work on going out, consulting, doing analysis and seeing what the particular
issues are in the communities that they cover. The first tranche of Medicare
Locals have started doing that. They have done interim needs assessment
reports, and we have good examples of Medicare Locals that have identified
dementia issues as a particular issue and have put in place pathways.[25]
6.47
Ms Carolyn Smith, of DoHA, explained how the Medical Local structure
could be used to create effective pathways of care that suited local
circumstances, and highlight effective models of care:
We are going to be working with the Medicare Local structure
in terms of adapting those local pathways to suit local circumstances, but also
how we can actually share good work that is happening. I think one of the
frustrations in some of these areas is that there are lots of really good
models of practice occurring around the country, and how do we actually learn
about all of the good stuff that is happening and develop it into tools that
can then be applied more broadly. We are going to be working very closely with
lead Medicare Locals and also the Medicare Local Alliance in terms of how we
can imbed those models of care and pathways into a broader setting.[26]
A multi-disciplinary approach
6.48
Many stakeholders submitted to the Committee that a multi-disciplinary
approach to providing dementia care and support was another means of creating a
clearer pathway of care for a person with dementia.
6.49
A multi-disciplinary approach to diagnosis is considered in Chapter 5.
6.50
It was submitted that the use of a multi-disciplinary team would ensure
that a person’s complex care needs were met appropriately, to improve a
person’s quality of life and assist them to remain independent for as long as
possible.
6.51
Aged Care Association Australia Ltd submitted:
An early diagnosis, supported by multi-disciplinary dementia
care teams – (comprising doctors, specialists, counsellors, family members,
communities etc.) could see an:
n Improved understanding
of the disease for all those impacted
n Improved levels of
involvement in advanced care planning, particularly for those individuals/families
uncertain what the future holds post diagnosis
n Improved approach
toward management and self-determination, rather than just treatment.[27]
6.52
Mercy Health stated that as with all chronic diseases, people with
dementia would benefit from a multi-disciplinary approach to care:
Mercy Health would urge that attention be given to supporting
an increased involvement of other health providers in the care of people with
dementia, including gerontologists, neurologists, registered nurses, social workers,
nutritionists, health and behavioural psychologists, speech pathologists, and occupational
and physiotherapists, in order that a comprehensive, integrated and quality
program of care can be provided to this group who are experiencing one of the
most disabling conditions and who are in most need our support.[28]
6.53
Dr Leslie Bolitho, of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians
(RACP), explained that an integrated and multi-disciplinary model of care was
needed to meet the needs of people with dementia (and their carers):
Adequately responding to the needs of people with dementia
and their carers over time will require an adapted and integrated healthcare
system and aged-care delivery driven by new and improved models of care and
service delivery involving multidisciplinary teams of professionals providing
care, particularly outside hospitals, and in the primary and ambulatory settings,
and particularly with residential aged-care facilities where over 50 per cent
of the residents have a diagnosis of dementia.[29]
6.54
The RACP and the Australian and New Zealand Society for Geriatric
Medicine (ANZSGM) submitted that people with dementia and their carers should
have easy and timely access to coordinated multi-disciplinary care over the
course of the condition. Such an approach would involve a shared-care model
involving (as required) the GP, specialist dementia nurse, medical specialist,
pharmacist and allied health professional(s)[30] who provide continuity
of care and smooth transitions across acute, sub-acute, transitional,
community, primary and palliative care settings. It was submitted that for such
a model to exist across Australia, consideration was needed regarding:
n Education and training
of the multi-disciplinary team;
n Workforce
requirements;
n Adequate financial
arrangements and incentives;
n Examples of good
practice; and
n Opportunities
presented through emerging technologies and the health and aged care reform
process.[31]
Committee comment
6.55
The Committee heard there was a need for greater coordination of
services and clearer referral pathways, to address concerns about the lack of linkages
between services and duplication of other services.
6.56
A number of suggestions were made to the Committee on how to achieve
better coordination and clearer pathways. These include:
n Utilising Medicare
Locals or other established primary care networks to streamline and coordinate
localised care pathways in a user-friendly way for people with dementia and
their carers; and
n Utilising a
multi-disciplinary approach to dementia care, by using a range of health
professionals trained to treat and assist people with dementia.
6.57
The Committee notes that policy development within the area of dementia
diagnosis and post-diagnostic care and support, is moving at a rapid rate.
Stakeholders are likely very familiar with the call for better coordination of
services, as outlined above.
6.58
The Committee understands that a range of initiatives which have the aim
of making care pathways more user-friendly and efficient for people with
dementia and their families are already in progress under the auspice the DoHA,
the Minister’s Dementia Advisory Group (MDAG), DCRCs and Alzheimer’s Australia.
For example, the Committee notes that MDAG is currently exploring the barriers
and opportunities for improving care, including avenues available through Medicare
Locals.[32]
6.59
The Committee joins with these stakeholders in recommending that government
facilitate initiatives which will assist in smoothing the post-diagnosis
pathway of care for people with dementia, their families and for health care
providers. Noting the Committee’s comments in Chapter 4, integration of
services should also extend to services available for people to obtain a
diagnosis of dementia.
Recommendation 11 |
6.60
|
The Australian Government
establish clear and streamlined local referral pathways for dementia
diagnosis, treatment and support, through Medicare Locals, localised primary
health care networks, or other specialist dementia networks such as Memory
Clinics.
|
Recommendation 12 |
6.61
|
The Australian Government
Department of Health and Ageing, in collaboration with the Minister’s
Dementia Advisory Group, Alzheimer’s Australia and Health Workforce Australia,
evaluate the creation of a nation-wide multi-disciplinary approach to dementia
diagnosis, treatment and support.
Such an approach should build
upon the existing workforce and localised infrastructure, such as Medicare
Locals and/or Memory Clinics.
|
Dementia link worker
6.62
While health practitioners and consumer groups called for clear pathways
and better coordination of care, consumers called for information to be
provided from a real person who could manage their case and link them in with
the appropriate services.[33] This person is referred
to as a Dementia Link Worker (DLW).
6.63
Mr Glenn Rees, Chief Executive Officer of Alzheimer’s Australia, called
for clear local pathways to allow medical professionals to refer people to
community support and information on an ongoing basis. Mr Rees relayed the call
from consumers for a key link worker to assist in the referral process:
One of the things that consumers stress over and over again
as important is having key link workers who focus on providing ongoing advice
as and when it is needed.[34]
6.64
Dr Jane Thompson, a carer, echoed the call for a ‘key worker’ to assist
people in navigating the system of care, telling the Committee of the difficulties
she experienced finding appropriate services:
I felt I was told, 'Well, here it is. You go home and deal
with it.' In fact it is very much up to the individual to work out where to go
for help and what sorts of services you are going to need, and it does require
considerable resourcefulness, I think, to negotiate that system. I think,
again, I would support Glenn's comments about the benefits that we might have
gained from having a key worker or a case manager to help us just negotiate our
way through the transitions that are required in care needs.[35]
6.65
The proposed role of a dementia link worker was outlined to the
Committee:
The primary role of a Dementia Link Worker would be to
provide support, advice and advocacy for the person with dementia and their
family. The goal is to link people to support and services early in diagnosis
before they may actively seek out formal supports and to provide a continuity
of support throughout the dementia journey. Individuals with dementia and their
families would be referred to a Dementia Link Worker soon after diagnosis. The
Dementia Link Worker would then assist in linking the person with dementia and
their families to support groups, education and information. The Dementia Link
Workers may also provide information and support about advanced care planning,
carer stress, and access to services such as respite.[36]
6.66
NSW Health envisaged that a key worker would be a person with a nursing
or allied health qualification, skilled in dementia care, who worked closely
with the person's GP or Aboriginal Medical Service, proactively following up
after diagnosis and building a continuing relationship. The key worker would
case manage a person’s care needs as they increased or became complex, and
would assist the person to remain independent for as long as possible.[37]
6.67
Alzheimer’s Australia outlined how the DLW program could be implemented
as part of the current aged care reforms, and integrated into existing models
of primary care:
n A DLWcould be
recruited from a variety of professional backgrounds, including nursing or
allied health fields (with backgrounds in areas such as social work, psychology
or occupational therapy);[38]
n The worker would have
specialised training and experience in dementia care, and extensive knowledge
of local services;
n Implementation of the
program would require the development and endorsement of an accreditation
program with appropriate competencies and professional development
requirements; and
n The program could be
delivered by existing community aged care providers, health provider
organisations or community organisations such as Alzheimer’s Australia or
Medicare Locals, and should build on existing networks.[39]
6.68
Alzheimer’s Australia South Australia has already implemented a DLW
program. The program was outlined to the Committee in Adelaide:
…we have what we call dementia link workers who work
throughout South Australia and we positioned one of our dementia link workers
with Craig in Repat [the Repatriation General Hospital] and this has proved to
be a really successful. Our organisation's aim is to try and get people on
diagnosis, so when they walk out of the memory clinic they walk straight into
one of our workers who can provide relevant information and then work with them
and the family throughout that journey.[40]
6.69
Ms Marie Alford, of Alzheimer’s Australia South Australia, said that
those people who had access to a DLW were more likely to be supported through
their dementia journey, than those people who received a passive referral, by
being given written information. This was particularly important for people who
were living alone:
I think one of the biggest barriers is around people who live
alone who develop dementia: how do we access this particular cohort? If they do
not have family members like Fred who will make that connection it is important
to have that immediate connection either through the GP or the specialist. What
we know is that passive referral where people are given a piece of information,
whether it is by the GP or specialist, may lead to a referral but those clients
who have direct access to a worker on the ground either at the QEH [Queen
Elizabeth Hospital] or at the Repat [Repatriation General Hospital] or potentially
through a GP clinic are more likely to be supported through their journey and
have an increased quality of life through that early intervention.[41]
6.70
Mrs Fiona Young, a Clinical Nurse Consultant in Tasmania, was part of Community
Dementia Service that offered consultation, assessment, information and the
provision of direct care to people with dementia living in the community. The
service considered that following up with people after diagnosis of dementia
was important. Within the service, follow up was provided to people in a number
of ways:
Depending on the individual client and on family needs, the
follow up ranged from phone calls to the client or carer, contact with other
services already involved in the client's care or admission to either the
Community Dementia Service or the Community Options Service, which is also part
of Primary Health North, for ongoing care provision and case management.[42]
6.71
It was submitted that post-diagnostic support promoted a feeling of
independence for a person with dementia, and assisted them to maintain control
over their life.[43]
Committee comment
6.72
It is clear to the Committee that the pathway from diagnosis to
receiving ongoing treatment and support is complex and difficult to navigate. Evidence
called for a case management approach to assist people with dementia and their
carers, following diagnosis. This will ensure that a person’s care and support
needs, and those of their carers, are met in a timely and appropriate way.
6.73
The Committee heard that there is a need to give people with dementia access
to a ‘real person’ who can coordinate their care from the point of diagnosis
and throughout progression of the condition.
6.74
Carers may also have discrete support needs and may require case
management in their own right.
6.75
As noted earlier in this chapter, some people do not require immediate
access to services, particularly when diagnosis is received at an early stage.
A case management approach that includes proactive follow up will ensure these
people are not forgotten and receive services when they are needed.
Recommendation 13 |
6.76
|
The Australian Government
Department of Health and Ageing examine the case for establishing a Dementia
Link Worker program to assist in the ongoing case management of people with
dementia and their carers.
A proactive case management
approach, utilising a Dementia Link Worker, should include regular scheduled
follow up from the time of diagnosis through the progression of the
condition.
|
How dementia care services can improve
quality of life
6.77
For early intervention of dementia to be successful, the Committee understands
that services must be dementia friendly, flexible and accessible.
Unfortunately, the Committee heard that this is not always the case.
Dementia management in acute care
6.78
In its report, Dementia care in hospitals costs and strategies,
the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) found that the
identification and recording of dementia as a diagnosis in hospital records was
often poor. This could impact on the treatment of individuals with dementia:
The identification and recording of dementia as a diagnosis
in hospital records is often poor. … there are a number of potential reasons
for this, including the time constraints on the interactions between patients
and doctors, clinical coding practices, the challenges associated with
differential diagnosis and cognitive impairment of dementia patients and the
systemic limitations and issues with documentation and classification practices...
… Under-identification of dementia in hospital data sets has
an impact on both the reliability of information and statistics and on the
approaches and practices used within the hospital. Ultimately,
under-identification has potential negative consequences for patient outcomes.[44]
6.79
Despite the large numbers of people with dementia being admitted for
some form of acute care, the Committee heard that hospital care was often not
‘dementia friendly’. As explained by RACP and ANZSGM:
Currently, hospitals are daunting places for people with
dementia in terms of both quality of care and quality of the environment with
higher likelihood of poor outcomes including disability and death. People with
dementia tend to have longer hospital stays and an increased number of complications
including polypharmacy, undernutrition, skin tears, pressure areas and
fall-related injuries. People with dementia can find hospitals unfamiliar,
confusing and disorienting and there is risk of sensory overload from a busy,
time-pressured ward.[45]
6.80
It was submitted that despite dementia being ‘core business’ for
hospital staff, dementia often went overlooked in hospital settings:
Diagnosis of cognitive impairment, specifically of dementia
and delirium, is often overlooked when older people are admitted for medical or
surgical reasons to emergency departments or acute hospital wards. Yet dementia
is associated with longer length of stay, behavioural complications, higher
rates of falls and fractures and more expensive admissions than non-demented
patients with same conditions.
Management of people with dementia in hospitals can be
sub-optimal if health professionals are not aware of the limitations of
cognitively impaired patients in even seemingly simple matters such as filling
in menus or adhering to treatment regimens.[46]
6.81
The Committee heard that in some hospital settings there was
insufficient recognition by staff of patients who had dementia, particularly
when the patients were admitted to hospital for a particular acute condition.[47]
6.82
Associate Professor Mark Yates explained that some families of hospital
patients with cognitive impairment believed that cognitive impairment was not
recognised by hospital staff:
Our research has shown us that on any day 30% of patients in
hospital have cognitive impairment and that families believe that in 20% of
admissions the hospital are unaware of their loved ones cognitive impairment.[48]
6.83
Given the prevalence of dementia within the acute care system, it was
submitted that one means of meeting the needs of these patients was to place Clinical
Nurse Specialists in dementia at all hospitals, to assist patients who had
dementia. Associate Professor Yates recommended this course of action:
I would also recommend that all hospitals have Clinical Nurse
Specialists in Dementia. It is surprising to me that almost all hospitals have
a Diabetes Nurse when the in-patient prevalence of this condition is 11.1%...
and an asthma nurse when is it estimated that asthma represents just 0.5% of
separations…but not have a Dementia Nurse Specialist who can provide staff
education, carer support and important links for the person with dementia into
the community on discharge.[49]
6.84
Mrs Judy Buckley, who cared for her mother with dementia, advised that
there needed to be some way to alert staff within hospitals that a patient had
dementia:
… when someone is, for example, in hospital for some other
reason, there needs to be some sort of indication that that person has
dementia. We have signage for disability in car parks and things that we are
all familiar with and that is usually around the hospital bed somewhere. But
there is nothing to indicate to staff that that person has some form of
dementia. I think it can lead to lots of misunderstanding and lots of confusion
for the person who is in hospital. I guess they are the main issues for me.[50]
6.85
Associate Professor Yates advocated for the nationalisation of a program
implemented in Victoria to improve awareness and communication with people with
dementia within hospitals:
In Victoria the Dementia Care in Hospitals Program has been
rolled out to 22 public hospitals and is now being trialled in the private
sector. It is a program to improve the awareness of and communication with
people with dementia and their families linked to a visual bedside alert called
the Cognitive Impairment Identifier. The program has led to improvement in
staff and carer satisfaction with the care of those with Cognitive Impairment.
I would recommend to the Inquiry that this program be made national as one
element in the improved care and early diagnosis of those with cognitive
impairment.[51]
6.86
Another perspective however was presented by Mrs Marianne Cummins, from
the Northern Territory Division of the Australian Association of Gerontology.
Mrs Cummins was concerned that using an identifier for patients with cognitive
impairment may lead to misdiagnosis in some instances:
As a nurse working in the hospital we already have people …that
are identified as having dementia and are labelled with dementia because of a
whole range of things. They may be delirious and acutely unwell. That is really
the common cause. It is the most common cause of people's confusion, and it is
on top of their chronic illnesses. It is well-known that if you have a chronic
illness and you become acutely unwell then you can become delirious. There are
a lot of risk factors. Sometimes it is actually about the hospital not then
going down the track of making sure that that acute illness is treated. That
would be the most disastrous thing I think because they have a lot of people
that that is an issue for.[52]
6.87
MDAG considered that early diagnosis of dementia, combined with training
of hospital health professionals on how best to assist patients with cognitive
impairment, could assist in reducing complications of care for a person’s primary
reason for admission and decrease their length of stay.[53]
6.88
To address the under-identification and awareness of dementia in
hospitals, MDAG recommended that hospital health professionals and other
front-line professionals undertake awareness training and education about the
importance of recognising cognitive impairment.[54]
Committee comment
6.89
For a number of reasons outlined above, the identification and awareness
of dementia within hospital settings is low. This undoubtedly effects a
person’s health outcomes and the quality of care that person receives.
6.90
As part of the Living Longer. Living Better. aged care reforms,
$39.2 million has been allocated to improve acute care services for people with
dementia. The reforms as outlined by DoHA, are:
People with dementia will be identified and better
coordinated and supported systems will be developed and trialled to enable safe
and appropriate hospital services. People with dementia will benefit through
early identification of cognitive impairment, improved assessment, and access
to specialist dementia programs. This will assist in achieving better outcomes
for people, including reduced falls, shorter stays, improved nutrition, and
fewer setbacks.[55]
6.91
It is further noted that these improved support services will take into
account people with dementia with specialised needs, including people from
culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander people and people with Younger Onset Dementia (YOD).[56]
6.92
In implementing reforms to acute care settings to improve treatment and
services for people with dementia, the Committee recommends consideration of
the following suggestions from experienced stakeholders specialising in
dementia care:
n The feasibility of
introducing Clinical Nurse Specialists in dementia into hospital settings, to
address the needs of dementia patients in acute care;
n The feasibility of
introducing a Cognitive Impairment Identifier into hospital settings; and
n The training and
education of hospital health professionals in dementia assessment, treatment
and care.
6.93
In addition, the Committee recommends that to improve management of
dementia in an acute care setting, a protocol be established regarding the
identification of cognitive issues at the point of triage.
6.94
Training and education of hospital health professionals in dementia
assessment, treatment and care is dealt with in the discussion regarding awareness
of health professionals in Chapter 3.
Recommendation 14 |
6.95
|
The Australian Government
Department of Health and Ageing, as part of the Living Longer. Living
Better. reforms and through the Council of Australian Governments, trial
the following initiatives to investigate their capacity to assist in
improving dementia care in acute hospital settings, with a view to these
initiatives being implemented nationally:
n The
introduction of Clinical Nurse Specialists in dementia in hospitals;
n The
introduction of a Cognitive Impairment Identifier in hospitals; and
n The
introduction of a protocol for the identification of cognitive issues at the
point of triage.
|
Accessible and flexible services
6.96
The Committee received a significant volume of evidence addressing the
issue of care services for people with dementia, and emphasising the specific needs
of particular population groups.[57]
6.97
The following section is not intended to be a comprehensive discussion
of the dementia care requirements for all population groups with specific
needs. Rather it is intended to be illustrative of the need for services that
are accessible and flexible enough to accommodate the different care
requirements of diverse populations.
6.98
As explained by Life Care, a South Australian community aged care
service provider, each individual has different care needs and, as dementia is
progressive, these needs are likely to change over time:
An individual with dementia has a very individual path as
they move from early diagnosis to moderate and advanced stages. Irrespective of
age, there needs to be flexible models of support in both community and
residential settings to meet their needs. For example, an 80 year old with some
early signs of cognitive decline, will not find a program for individuals with
advanced dementia stimulating or appropriate. Service providers must have
flexible management of programs and the skills to identify and address each
individual’s needs. Their models of care are often restricted due to funding
and staffing constraints, rather than individual care needs.[58]
6.99
The need for accessible and flexible dementia care services is
considered with reference to the following population groups:
n People with YOD;
n People with
intellectual disabilities;
n People from
culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds;
n Indigenous
Australians; and
n People living in
regional, rural and remote areas.
6.100
Discussing issues relating to dementia care services for people with
YOD, the NSW HACC Forum submitted:
People with younger onset dementia can be at a very different
life stage than older people with dementia. They may be in full-time
employment, with caring responsibilities for children, may be physically fit
and active, and have a number of interests. As support for dementia is mostly
funded and provided in the aged care sector, people with younger onset dementia
do not necessarily identify with needing the types of care or support available
for people with dementia.[59]
6.101
It was submitted that younger patients with dementia needed access to
age-appropriate services, rather than services targeted towards older people.[60]
Ms Kate Swaffer, who was diagnosed with dementia at age 49, noted that there
were a number of factors that needed to be taken into account when considering
the appropriateness of care and support services for people with YOD. These
factors included that a person with YOD was more likely to be still in paid
employment when the diagnosis came, and have dependent children. [61]
6.102
In relation to residential care facilities, HammondCare noted the
distinct care needs of people with YOD:
Younger people with dementia have a different set of needs as
they are heavily involved in complex professional and family relationships.
They tend to be much more physically active than older people with more
conventional forms of dementia and are more likely to have a form of dementia
that is associated with higher levels of behaviours of concern, such as
fronto-temporal lobe dementia. This means that traditional residential aged
care services are not well-equipped to support younger people with dementia.[62]
6.103
According to evidence presented by Dr Jennifer Torr, people with
intellectual disabilities and dementia have particular problems with accessing
appropriate services. In relation to this, Dr Torr commented:
… people [with intellectual disabilities] living in group
homes are seriously disadvantaged and refused access to a range of allied
health services that would be provided to someone with dementia living at home.
Have group homes been confused with aged care facilities which are required to
provide these services? Group homes provide accommodation support, not health
care.[63]
6.104
Dr Torr called for greater clarity on how eligibility criteria for
accessing dementia care services applies to people with an intellectual
disability following a diagnosis of dementia, observing that:
The failure to provide adequate support within family home,
or group homes can only result in premature placement in an aged care facility.[64]
6.105
The Australian Nursing Federation submitted that there was a need to
educate the health and aged care workforce on culturally sensitive, acceptable
and specific approaches to the dementia care for people from CALD backgrounds,
noting:
Flexibility in models of dementia care must be supported to
accommodate preferences for intervention for people from culturally and
linguistically diverse backgrounds. Initiatives are required to be adopted that
build cultural awareness and cultural competence of the health and aged care
workforce. Dementia care resources need to include models that support cultural
liaison.[65]
6.106
Mercy Health echoed the call for more training for service providers
around the social and spiritual needs of people with CALD backgrounds, noting
that differences in language and culture could create challenges for service
providers:
Consistent with population changes indicating that between
one quarter and one third of Australians were born in a country other than
Australia, the current and future needs of ageing migrant and CALD communities
needs to be an increased priority. For those living with dementia and their
families, particularly in the urban centres of Australia, linguistic and
cultural diversity assumes great significance. Social isolation, reversion to
‘first’ language, confusion exacerbated by unfamiliarity with prevailing Western
cultural mores, and other factors pose unique and major challenges for communication
with and assessment of such individuals.[66]
6.107
The Committee also received evidence indicating a shortage of dementia
care services which address the specific needs of Indigenous Australians,
particularly those living in remote communities.[67]
6.108
Professor David Atkinson, Medical Director with the Kimberley Aboriginal
Medical Services Council, explained that accessibility of services was a major
issue in remote Indigenous communities:
The big issue is that services are provided in the towns but
most of the people actually do not live in the big towns and, therefore,
patients do not really have access to them. The system is not sufficiently
flexible to deliver services in communities.[68]
6.109
Professor Atkinson considered that communities needed to have input into
how the services were to be delivered:
… The thing that would work for remote communities would be
to have funding that is put together and communities having a say in what
services they need. If they have two young people with disabilities and five or
six old people, maybe one person can contribute to all of those people's care.
That would be more efficient. They can employ local people. As it is, we have
visiting services coming in for an hour or two and then going away again, and
that is clearly a waste of resources and probably not that productive.[69]
6.110
Ms Wilma Gibson, who manages aged and disability services within the Central
Desert Shire Council in the Northern Territory, advised that when providing
dementia care services to remote Indigenous communities, there was a need to
consider the cultural differences in how dementia was perceived and how care
could be provided:
There are two different realms here: how we would actually
perceive dementia and work with dementia, and then what is it to an Indigenous
community and culture around that and how do you work with that, and then how
do you go on a much closer scale within that household environment to work with
that person, because maybe something has happened and you have got a fear that
has developed because some safety issue has taken place. There are a lot of
other things that need to be considered as to how we really make that workable
on community because it is becoming quite demanding. That is pretty much the
challenge in and around that.[70]
6.111
Ms Nina Bullock, who similarly managed aged care services at MacDonnell
Shire Council, considered that providing appropriate care to remote Indigenous
communities required forming partnerships between the person, their extended
families, and the relevant agencies:
Culturally safe services, information and activities are
often hard to come by. This community alone has lost 14 members in the last two
months. Yet the community has access to hidden assets: the support of a wide
network of family members who reside on community, on a country that they know
intimately; a history of resilience; a living language; and ideas about how to
move forward and to where. Thus it is critical to a client's wellbeing and
independence that plans for their care are undertaken in true partnership with
the extended family and relevant agencies.[71]
6.112
Shortages of dementia care services in remote, rural and regional communities
represents a major barrier to accessing appropriate interventions for people
with dementia living outside of Australia’s metropolitan centres.[72]
6.113
Mr Terry Mehan, of Queensland Health, told the Committee of the
advantages and disadvantages faced by people in rural communities, in relation
to the provision of aged care services:
Your advantage is that whole sense of community, flexibility
and responsive. Your disadvantage is that you will not be able to sustain
specialist services because of your low numbers. You do not have small country
towns with specialist geriatricians. What you could have is a nurse in that
hospital that has extended skills in aged care. You have to tailor the package
of services to meet your community needs but you have a fair degree of
flexibility.
In my observation there is a strong sense of community and
responsiveness, but the disadvantage is that if you have an acute condition and
you need specialised care you have to travel long distances. The distance of
travel is usually an hour or two in New South Wales but is usually four to six
hours in Queensland, so it is the distances of travel and the convenience and
affordability of air travel. You are dislocated from those specialist services.[73]
6.114
The National Rural Health Alliance advised the Committee that:
Poor access to primary care generally in country areas,
including shortages of medical specialists and allied health professionals of
any kind, let alone those that specialise in dementia, mean there is less
likelihood of early diagnosis and treatment for people in those areas. The
smaller aged care services with fluctuating numbers, that struggle to be
sustainable in rural and remote communities, are also less likely to have the
capacity to provide specialised dementia care – although the more flexible care
arrangements possible can contribute to more personalised care for local people
with dementia.[74]
Committee comment
6.115
Dementia is not a condition that is exclusive to ‘old age’ or limited to
people from a specific background. People with dementia vary in age, and come
from diverse cultural backgrounds and have a range of life experiences. People
with dementia may live in the city, or they may live in regional, rural and
remote communities. They may have a large extended family, or they may live
alone. Further, a person’s care needs will likely change over time.
6.116
Navigating the maze of services to determine what services might be
available following a diagnosis of dementia is one of the most significant
challenges that people with dementia and their families face. However, it is
not the only challenge. To be beneficial to people with dementia and their
families, the Committee understands that dementia care services must be accessible
to those that need them and sufficiently flexible to meet the differing care
needs of diverse population groups.
6.117
There are several factors that may affect a person’s ability to access
dementia care services. For example, the Committee heard there is a need to
increase the accessibility of dementia care services, particularly in regional,
rural and remote areas. Regional, rural and remote areas often face particular
challenges accessing community care services. Services may simply not be
available locally. Equally, restrictive eligibility criteria, and inconsistency
or confusion around the application of eligibility criteria, can also limit
access for some population groups. This is illustrated by the challenges
accessing dementia care services facing people with YOD and intellectual
disability.
6.118
The Committee also recognises that there is a need for greater
flexibility within dementia care services. As noted earlier, people with dementia
(and their families and carers) are not a homogenous group. The Committee
agrees that services should be structured in such a way that they have the
capacity to adapt to a person’s individual needs, rather than requiring the
person to adapt to the service they are accessing. For example, services may
need to have the capacity to adapt to and account for differences in a person’s
age, cultural identity and life experiences.
6.119
The Committee understands that the issues raised in relation to accessibility
and flexibility of community-based and residential care services for people
with dementia reflect long-standing concerns with these systems. The Committee
notes that these issues were examined and reported on in 2011 in an Australian
Government commissioned report, Dementia services pathways
– an essential guide to dementia services planning.[75]
6.120
The Committee also notes that as part of the Living Longer. Living
Better. reforms, funding has been approved to support the following actions:
n Improved support for
people with YOD ($23.6 million);
n Ensuring older people
from diverse backgrounds can access aged care services that are specific to
their needs ($24.4 million);
n Ensuring sexual
diversity does not act as a barrier to receiving high quality aged care ($2.5
million);
n More assistance for
older people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness ($7.3 million);
n Ensuring culturally
appropriate quality aged care services are available for Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people ($43.1 million); and
n Ensuring the
sustainability of aged care services in regional, rural and remote areas ($108
million).[76]
6.121
In implementing these initiatives, the Committee emphasises that
frameworks should have sufficient flexibility to empower specific population
groups and communities to structure services according to specific and local
needs. The Committee encourages the Australian Government to consult regularly
with stakeholders, including state and territory governments (where relevant),
providers of services and users of services (people with dementia and their
families). Furthermore the Committee believes that robust partnerships with
local communities and stakeholder groups will be essential to effective implementation,
if dementia care services are to be structured to ensure the needs of specific
population groups and communities are met.
6.122
The Committee also notes that much of the evidence regarding the ability
of dementia care services to meet the needs of people from diverse backgrounds
relates to the need to better educate and train health professionals. This
issue has been addressed separately in Chapter 3.