My deepest regret is that we
lost so much time during the first years of her illness. Time wasted by
repetitive misdiagnosis by all her doctors. I am sad about all our unnecessary
fear, struggle, anger, my poor mother must have felt so misunderstood and abandoned
at times, when we did not believe her. In addition, I have lost precious years
when I could have been studying about dementia and actively assisting my
mother, instead of becoming emotionally and mentally ill in my caring role.[1]
Chapter 5 Barriers to diagnosis
5.1
As discussed in Chapter 4, a diagnosis of dementia can take an average
of three years from the time a person starts experiencing symptoms of cognitive
decline or memory loss.[2]
5.2
The Committee was told that part of this delay is due to a lack of
awareness and the stigma attached to dementia. Other barriers exist within the
health system itself.
5.3
The Committee heard countless stories from carers and individuals,
telling of lengthy delays in receiving a diagnosis of dementia. A delay in
diagnosis denies a person the opportunity to receive beneficial treatment to
enhance their quality of life and maintain their independence by making plans
for their future care. The benefits of receiving an early diagnosis are
outlined in more detail in Chapter 4.
5.4
There are four main types of barriers to receiving an early or timely
diagnosis of dementia:
n Consumer level
barriers;
n Primary care provider
level barriers;
n Health system level
barriers; and
n Service context
barriers.[3]
5.5
Consumer level barriers to diagnosis, such as lack of awareness and
stigma about dementia, are discussed in Chapter 3.
5.6
The barriers which exist to prevent medical professionals from making an
early or timely diagnosis of dementia, including barriers within the health
care system, are discussed below.
Who can make a diagnosis of
dementia?
5.7
Dementia may be diagnosed in a number of different medical settings:
n By a medical
professional in a primary care setting (for example, a General Practitioner
(GP) or Nurse Practitioner (NP));
n By a specialist, such
as a neurologist, geriatrician, gerontologist, psychogeriatrician, psychiatrist,
or neuropsychologist;
n By a medical
practitioner in an acute care setting such as a hospital; or
n Through a service
operated by a multi-disciplinary team, such as an Aged Care Assessment Team
(ACAT) or memory clinic.[4]
5.8
The barriers to achieving early diagnosis in the above settings are
discussed further below.
Barriers to diagnosis in primary
care
5.9
A GP is often the first point of contact when a person is concerned
about possible memory loss. Approximately 83 per cent of Australians consulted
with a GP at least once a year, with 73 per cent of people aged over 75 years
of age consulting with a GP four or more times during 2010-11.[5]
5.10
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) told the
Committee that as a person’s main health care provider, GPs had an important
role in recognising, assessing, diagnosing and managing dementia.[6]
5.11
Professor Henry Brodaty, of the Minister’s Dementia Advisory Group (MDAG),
told the Committee that primary care was the key to obtaining early diagnosis
of dementia, and the ‘corner shop’ where people went for assessment and
management of dementia.[7]
5.12
The Australian General Practice Network (AGPN) explained the benefits of
using general practice teams in the assessment of dementia:
General practice teams, particularly the GP and practice
nurse (PN), who often have established relationships with patients and are commonly
the first professionals to whom patients present for medical assistance, are
well placed to recognise the symptoms and signs of early dementia and to
trigger diagnostic evaluations.[8]
5.13
Mr Glenn Rees, of Alzheimer’s Australia, told the Committee that over 90
per cent of Australians would approach their GP first, if they were concerned
about their memory. Accordingly, the knowledge and skills of a GP often
determined how early a diagnosis was made:
So the GPs are the gatekeepers for the system. Depending on
whether the gatekeeper, the GP, is familiar with dementia and knows what to
look for, the process for the person can be good, as it was reasonably good in
Jane’s case. If the GP is not familiar with it or regards it as just a question
of ageing, the person will be sent on their way until the concern becomes so
great that the dementia becomes very obvious, in which case a diagnosis is very
late.[9]
5.14
Mr Rees outlined the best practice approach to a GP making a diagnosis
of dementia:
The best practice, really, is for the GP or the practice
nurse to screen the person, do the simple tests, and if they are convinced that
there is a problem to then refer them to a specialist, whether that is a
neurologist or a geriatrician or some other speciality. Obviously it depends on
what the doctor thinks is the problem. From that point, the person probably
comes back to the GP, gets the diagnosis and then—this is the second critical
point—gets a referral to services.[10]
5.15
Mrs Elizabeth Rand, of Cognitive Dementia and Memory Services (CDAMS),
told the Committee that while a GP could take many people through the entire
assessment process, there were some cases where a GP should refer the person
for a specialist assessment:
Once they do present to their GPs that GP needs to recognise
the significance of the problems and whether they then need to go on to have a
more specialist assessment to determine whether it is a dementia and what can
be done about it. A percentage of people can be managed well by GPs and in
general practice but people that are presenting quite early need perhaps a bit
more detailed assessment, such as what can be provided through memory clinics,
to work out whether it is dementia and what type of dementia it is.[11]
5.16
Dr Lynne Barnes, a General Practitioner, advised that she would normally
refer a person with memory issues to a specialist for thorough testing:
The patient would come to see the doctor, or often a family
member will come to the doctor beforehand and say, ‘Look, I am having trouble
with this relative.’ It might be mum or dad or whoever, and then you get the
patient in. I then take their history, examine the patient and look for any
other sorts of medical problems and then, if I thought the patient had
dementia, I would start to check for any screening tests that might be done for
treatable causes for that. I would then probably refer them to one of the
services we have here…
… I could either refer to the dementia support worker or the
psychogeriatric service. They are both based at the same place…
Then we would get the visiting geriatrician to see the
person.[12]
5.17
Despite GPs being the first point of contact for most people
experiencing memory issues, the Committee heard there were many barriers to GPs
providing a timely diagnosis of dementia.
5.18
These barriers include:
n System-level
barriers/operation of the primary health care system:
§
Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) item numbers;
§
Poor remuneration; and
§
Perceived or actual lack of available services.
n Attitudes of GPs:
§
Nihilistic attitudes; and
§
False negative diagnoses (‘it’s just old age’).
n Knowledge and skills
of GPs:
§
Lack of awareness about the signs of memory loss and other
cognitive symptoms.[13]
5.19
The knowledge and skills of GPs regarding dementia diagnosis and
treatment are discussed further in Chapter 3.
Barriers for General Practitioners
5.20
There were a number of system-level barriers cited to the Committee
which were said to prevent or delay a GP’s ability to diagnose dementia. These
barriers included remuneration for undertaking an assessment for dementia and limitations
around consultation times.
5.21
Associate Professor Mark Yates, of MDAG, told the Committee of the
nature of the Medicare system, as it related to remuneration (using geriatrics
as an example):
I think the reality of the Medicare system is that you get
paid well if you stick something in, through or up someone but not if you think
deeply about them. That is not unique to geriatrics; that is unique to a number
of the subspecialty areas such as rheumatology, infectious diseases and endocrinology,
for that matter, with diabetes. Medicare has been modified to meet some of that
with the additional item numbers for geriatricians; I think that has grown the
number of geriatricians and that will happen over time.[14]
5.22
The AGPN observed that there was no remuneration available through
Medicare for primary health care teams to consult with the carer of a person
with cognitive issues such as dementia, unless the carer was seeking their own
medical assistance.[15]
5.23
CDAMS supported the revision of the MBS to ensure GPs were adequately
remunerated for the additional time required for the assessment, diagnosis and
ongoing support of people (and their carers) with dementia. CDAMS believed this
support should include remuneration for the additional support provided to
families, sometimes independently of patient visits.[16]
5.24
Regarding limited consultation times under Medicare, the AGPN stated:
Assessment processes for dementia, and often provision of the
comprehensive dementia management support required, cannot effectively be
undertaken within the time period associated with the shorter consultation that
can be claimed through the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) item. Whilst there
are avenues to claim longer consultations under the MBS, for both patient flow
and business viability reasons, many practice systems are structured around
shorter consultations. Some practices are also not aware of how to effectively
use available MBS items to support longer consultations for people with
dementia.[17]
5.25
Dr Catherine Yelland, of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians
(RACP), said diagnosing dementia was time-consuming and did not fit well within
a brief general-practitioner consultation.[18]
5.26
NSW HACC Issues Forum told the Committee that GPs had limited opportunities
to monitor a person’s cognitive capacity on an ongoing basis, due to the nature
of consultations:
GPs have limited opportunities to monitor peoples’ cognitive
capacity on an ongoing basis. GP consultation times are brief, and often do not
give GPs the opportunity to pick up on signs and symptoms of dementia. People
experiencing memory loss, confusion or behavioural change may be hesitant to
report these experiences to their GP, or may mask these symptoms during
consultations. Symptoms of dementia can thus go medically undetected for quite
some time.[19]
5.27
Ms Helga Merl, of Hunter Medicare Local, told the Committee that a
formal assessment for dementia could take at least an hour and a half, which
was prohibitive in a primary care setting:
The issue is that that type of assessment takes at least an
hour and a half. Within primary care there are just not the funds or
reimbursements to recompense somebody for spending that amount of time in
primary care in a busy practice. When there are the pressures of a waiting room
full of other people, being able to spend an hour and a half with someone is a
luxury we just do not have.[20]
5.28
The Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA)
outlined the number of MBS items which could be utilised as part of an assessment
process:
n health assessments
provided for people aged 75 and older that can be undertaken annually – MBS
items 701-707;
n comprehensive medical
assessments in residential aged care facilities that can be provided annually;
n people of any age,
with suspected or diagnosed dementia, are eligible for longer consultations
using the standard General Practitioner attendance items – Level C attendance
item - lasting at least 20 minutes, and the Level D attendance item - lasting
at least 40 minutes.[21]
5.29
Despite the MBS items available to support diagnosis of dementia, DoHA
acknowledged that many GPs were unaware of the MBS items available to assist in
dementia assessment and diagnosis, and required further education in this
regard:
So there is some work to be done around how to switch GPs
more on to what is available to support them in not only diagnosing someone,
but also coordinating their care. I know that we have provided some information
to the minister's group around what potential items on the MBS could be
available for that purpose. For example, there is an annual health check for
people over the age of 75, but there are also the chronic disease items which
actually enable not only that sort of care coordination with a GP, but also
then access and referral on to allied health services and the like.[22]
5.30
Ms Kathryn Cunningham, of Alzheimer's Australia in South Australia,
agreed that the wider use of MBS items for the assessment of dementia symptoms
should be promoted:
We promote wider use of existing MBS items for the assessment
and management of dementia symptoms by GPs and aged-care nurse practitioners.
We recommend review of existing MBS items and, where necessary, revision or
creation of new items to ensure effective payment to support identification,
assessment and management of dementia in primary care, we recommend the
creation of financial incentives to support cognitive screening as part of the
75-plus health assessment, and we encourage dementia related GP consultation in
residential aged care.[23]
5.31
The Committee was told that a proposal was made for the funds earmarked
to achieve timely diagnosis through the Living Longer. Living Better. aged
care reforms to be used for the development, piloting and national
dissemination of a training resource package for health professionals including
GPs, NPs and practice nurses. The proposed training package would be implemented
through Medicare Locals and include education on the use of MBS items for cognitive
assessment and management of dementia.[24]
5.32
Alzheimer’s Australia commented on the move:
This is good progress but it has been much more difficult to
identify Medicare Benefit Items that could be used by doctors to ensure that
they are compensated for time required for diagnosis, assessment and referral
of patients to services. Further work is to be done but it is clear that a
"Business Plan" is needed for GPs to ensure they are able to the
extent possible to use the MBS items to achieve timely diagnosis.[25]
Committee comment
5.33
At a systems level, one the main barriers to individuals receiving a
timely diagnosis of dementia through their GP relates to the use of MBS Items.
5.34
The Committee heard proposals that the use of MBS items for dementia
diagnosis be reviewed in consideration of the following issues:
n The need to provide
adequate remuneration for the lengthy time required to undertake a diagnosis of
dementia (including time to undertake a screening test);
n The need to better
inform GPs about the use of MBS items for cognitive assessment and diagnosis of
dementia;
n The need to provide
an MBS item for carers or family members to consult with a GP or other
practitioner about an individual they are concerned with regarding cognitive
issues;
n The need to promote
the use of a multi-disciplinary team in dementia assessment and diagnosis; and
n The possibility of
expanding the use of the 75-plus assessment to include or support cognitive
assessment.
5.35
The Committee comments in detail on the use of the 75-plus assessment
for cognitive assessment in Chapter 4. The use of a multi-disciplinary team in
dementia diagnosis is discussed later in this chapter.
5.36
The Committee notes the work already being undertaken through MDAG and
DoHA to educate primary care practitioners about the use of MBS items for
dementia diagnosis and assessment, as part of a broader program to achieve
better rates of timely diagnosis of dementia. The Committee supports the use of
the funds available through the Living Longer. Living Better. scheme to
encourage the wider use of MBS items for dementia assessment and diagnosis, and
wider training for GPs in dementia diagnosis and intervention (this is
discussed further in Chapter 3).
5.37
As indicated in Chapter 4, the Committee considers there is a need to review
the usefulness of existing MBS items for dementia diagnosis and assessment, to
determine whether expansion of existing items is necessary, or whether further
items are required to support early and timely diagnosis of dementia.
Recommendation 7 |
5.38
|
The Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
undertake a comprehensive review of the use of existing MBS items to determine
whether it is necessary to expand existing items or create new items to
support identification, assessment and management of dementia in primary
care.
|
Barriers to specialist diagnosis
5.39
Although GPs are often the first point of contact for a person
experiencing memory loss or cognitive decline, GPs or individuals often refer
patients to specialists in dementia diagnosis, to assist in complex cases or to
conduct a thorough assessment.
5.40
There are a number of specialists who are able to make a diagnosis of
dementia. These include (but are not limited to):
n A Gerontologist – a
doctor who studies old age, its diseases and phenomena;
n A Geriatrician - a
doctor who specialises in the care of older people;
n A Psychogeriatrician
- a doctor who specialises in mental disorders affecting older people;
n A Neurologist - a
doctor who specialises in the diagnosis and treatment of disorders of the nervous
system, including the brain, spinal cord and nerves;
n A Neuropsychologist -
a psychologist who specialises in disorders of the brain and how they affect
memory, thinking and behaviour;[26] or
n A Psychiatrist - a
doctor who specialises in the diagnosis and treatment of mental disorders,
emotional disturbances and thought disorders.[27]
5.41
The RACP and Australian and New Zealand Society for Geriatric Medicine
(ANZSGM) explained that specialist medical care was essential at the time of
diagnosis:
Specialist medical care is especially required at the time of
diagnosis; when medical acuity and/or behavioural and psychological symptoms of
dementia (BPSD) increase (frequently at the midpoint of the disease); and at
end of life. Geriatricians, general physicians, psychogeriatricians and
neurologists are skilled at making a complete and accurate diagnosis of
dementia.[28]
5.42
Associate Professor Mark Yates, of MDAG, told the Committee of the
important link between medical practitioners in primary care and specialists in
the diagnostic process:
Again, going back to this concept of the connection between
primary care and specialist services, when it is more complicated—which is the
very early stage, as opposed to timely—with all the comorbidities that are
perhaps associated with someone with a memory problem, GPs have to have
somewhere nationally where someone is putting up their hand and saying, ‘If
you've got a problem as a GP with someone who is worried about their memory and
you can’t sort it out, we can do it.’ To make primary healthcare work well,
they have to have a means by which they can have specialist help.[29]
5.43
A number of barriers to achieving a diagnosis of dementia in specialist
settings were outlined to the Committee. These barriers include limited access
to specialist care in regional, rural and remote areas of Australia.
Specialist diagnosis in rural,
regional and remote communities
5.44
The Committee heard a number of stories from people living in rural,
regional or remote communities, advising of the lack of access to medical
specialists to assist in making a diagnosis of dementia.
5.45
The National Rural Health Alliance (NRHA) told the Committee:
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.[30]
5.46
The Committee heard that the only gerontologist available to see people
in Moree was based in Tamworth and visited Moree approximately once every six
to eight weeks.[31]
5.47
Cecilia, from Moree, who cared for her mother with Alzheimer’s Disease, advised
that she took her mother to see a geriatrician in Toowoomba (some 300km away),
who undertook the necessary assessments and made a diagnosis of dementia. [32]
5.48
NRHA considered that innovative approaches to dementia care, such as
telehealth[33] initiatives, would be
required to facilitate early diagnosis and treatment of dementia in regional,
rural and remote communities:
Innovative approaches to team dementia care, such as outreach
services, telehealth consultations with specialists and other work to
complement the work of local health professionals, will be an important part of
this strategy.[34]
5.49
Mrs Judy Ratajec, of Uniting Church Frontier Services, said the use of telehealth
initiatives may be useful in the diagnostic process:
You can use telehealth to help with the diagnosis—you can
have with the person a clinician who has done all of the assessments and all the
pathology and they can talk to a specialist to pull that together and have a
conversation.[35]
5.50
Dr Robert Prowse, President of ANZSGM, told the Committee that
telehealth initiatives could address the gap in care available to Australians
with dementia living in regional, rural and remote locations:
In some rural areas there is a visiting geriatrician or
psychogeriatrician who goes to that place regularly and sees patients. I do
that myself in Port Augusta, in South Australia. But it is a once-a-month
visit. The demand is bigger than the service can provide. I am aware that there
are many other places that do not have that service, that do not have a
geriatrician visiting. We, I think, struggle to find people who feel they can
give their time to the disruption that that causes to clinical practice back in
the city. The telehealth initiatives, which are well developed in Queensland… would
provide the opportunity for people to do at least some of the assessment from
home. They can easily, and it has been shown that they can effectively, allow
assessment and diagnosis with a general practitioner or another person with the
patient at their home site and with the specialist observing from the city
base.[36]
5.51
The Pharmacy Guild of Australia submitted that local pharmacies could
assist in providing access to telehealth services:
Access to telehealth will also assist in addressing some of
the barriers to accessing dementia related medical services for patients in
rural, regional and outer metropolitan areas. It should be recognised that in
many circumstances, particularly in regional and remote Australia, the local
community pharmacy may be the only available or most appropriate health service
for conducting telehealth consultations. The Guild strongly believes that
community pharmacy should be viewed as an ‘other health care facility’ in which
a patient can access telehealth and video conference to a specialist at another
location.[37]
5.52
The Australian Nursing Federation (ANF) also saw the potential of
utilising telehealth to improve access to specialists, and recommended it also
use telephone link-ups where videoconferencing was not an option:
The ANF considers there is huge potential for the use of
telehealth to improve access to specialist gerontology and/or support services
for people in remote, rural and regional areas requiring cognitive assessment
and dementia care. However, we believe this facility should be extended beyond
use of videoconferencing techniques, to enable Medicare reimbursement to health
professionals for utilising telephone link-up, where this is the only
communication facility available in remote sites (or the only reliable service
available).[38]
5.53
NSW Health suggested that telehealth could be utilised as part of a wider
multi-disciplinary strategy in regional, rural or remote communities of
Australia:
Integrated models would need to be appropriate for rural
settings and provide access for culturally and linguistically diverse and
Aboriginal populations through interpreter time, outreach and liaison. In rural
areas, the model would be dependent on improved access to these Medical
Specialist positions, either through increasing the number of positions
particularly in rural areas or improving access through recent tele-health
initiatives.[39]
Committee comment
5.54
Lack of access to specialists equipped to make a diagnosis of dementia
is likely to inhibit early and timely diagnosis in regional, rural and remote
communities of Australia. Distance is often a significant barrier to achieving
access to early and timely diagnosis of dementia in these communities.
5.55
While GPs may be equipped to make a diagnosis of dementia, GPs and other
primary care practitioners may require specialist advice before a diagnosis can
be made, particularly in complex cases, or where a person is young, or
presenting at the early stages of the condition.
5.56
The Committee has heard stories of individuals who travelled hundreds of
kilometres away from their home to obtain a diagnosis of dementia from a
specialist. Others waited several months to see a visiting specialist.
5.57
There is a clear need to ensure that regional, rural and remote
communities of Australia are equipped with appropriate access to specialist
medical practitioners and diagnostic services, to encourage timely diagnosis
and support for dementia.
5.58
The best way of gaining access to specialist services would be to encourage
medical practitioners specialising in dementia diagnosis and treatment to work
in rural and remote areas of Australia. However, the Committee recognises that
this is often not a viable option.
5.59
Another model of care would be for primary care practitioners to work in
collaboration with a visiting specialist (such as a gerontologist or
geriatrician), with additional specialist support provided via telehealth.
5.60
Such collaboration could form part of a multi-disciplinary team providing
diagnosis, management and support services for dementia. These
multi-disciplinary teams could be coordinated through Medicare Locals, or
otherwise at a local level.
5.61
The Committee notes that through the Living Longer. Living Better. aged
care reforms, the Commonwealth will allocate $58.5 million to promote ‘better
practice and partnerships’ and remove barriers for people with particular
needs, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and those living
in rural and remote areas. This includes increasing multi-disciplinary care and
introducing telehealth trials.[40]
5.62
The Committee supports the trialling of multi-disciplinary teams of
care, including the use of telehealth initiatives, as a means of encouraging
early diagnosis and intervention of dementia in regional, rural and remote
communities of Australia.
5.63
Multi-disciplinary care is discussed further below, and in Chapter 6.
Recommendation 8 |
5.64
|
The Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
implement early and timely diagnosis in regional, rural and remote
communities where access to specialist diagnosis is limited by coordinating
multi-disciplinary teams comprising primary health care practitioners and
visiting medical specialists, supplemented by primary or specialist
assessment provided via telehealth facilities.
The need for multi-disciplinary teams should be assessed at
a local level, via Medicare Locals, or other such local health networks.
|
Diagnosis in a multi-disciplinary
practice
5.65
A number of individuals and organisations advocated for a
multi-disciplinary system of diagnosis, treatment and management of dementia in
Australia.[41] How a multi-disciplinary
approach to diagnosis would operate is discussed below. How such an approach
would operate post-diagnosis is discussed in Chapter 6.
5.66
The RACP and the ANZSGM support a shared-care approach to dementia diagnosis,
which would involve GPs, medical specialists, nurses, pharmacists and other
allied health professionals (as needed):
A network of specialist, multidisciplinary clinics and
services should be systematically resourced and comprehensively established
across Australia to undertake assessment and diagnosis of cognitive impairment
and dementia. It is preferable that the clinic be led by a medical specialist
who will usually be a geriatrician (or geriatric trainee) and include, at a
minimum, a specialist dementia nurse, social worker and/or occupational
therapist and neuropsychologist/ psychologist. Currently, different memory
clinic models are in operation across Australian jurisdictions.[42]
5.67
RACP and ANZSGM considered that the Victorian Government’s Cognitive,
Dementia and Memory Services (CDAMS) clinics represented the best model to
inform a national, systematic approach to the diagnosis of dementia.[43]
CDAMS provides clients (and their families and carers) with access to
specialist multi-disciplinary assessment and diagnosis, advice, referral and
education.[44]
5.68
Mrs Elizabeth Rand, of CDAMS, called for the wider introduction of
memory-clinic style models as a means of supporting GPs in diagnosis:
We feel that the introduction of memory-clinic-style services
more broadly would provide an engine room for supporting primary care and GPs,
as GPs remain the first port of call for most people when they first develop
symptoms and are wondering what is going on, and they also remain the central
figure in coordinating all of a person's health care. So CDAMS can support them
in that role with regard to cognition and dementia.[45]
5.69
Mrs Rand explained the usual process of diagnosis in CDAMS:
With the CDAMS model, when they get referred to us generally
they have an initial assessment by a community nurse or an OT or a social
worker that goes and sees them in their home…
… Generally that is a face-to-face appointment that might
take an hour and a half to two hours. Following that they come in and see one
of the medical specialists; that might be a neurologist or a geriatrician or a
psychiatrist, depending on what their presentation is. They will spend about an
hour and a half with them doing some cognitive testing, a physical examination
and a bit more history taking. After that, if it is still not clear what is
going on, in our service we have neuropsychologists and they can do some very
detailed testing…[46]
5.70
Dr John Ward, a Geriatrician, also advocated for the introduction of a
shared-care system for dementia diagnosis and intervention across Australia,
based on the model operating in the Hunter/Newcastle area of NSW. Dr Ward
submitted:
It is a shared-care program with general practitioners,
designed around locally based Community Dementia Nurses (CDNs) who work within
ACATs, together with a Geriatrician who has responsibility for that community
as part of the workload…
…The Geriatrician sees people referred by GPs while the CDN
sees people with cognitive impairment referred to ACAT or directly to her from
any source. The CDN assists the Geriatrician with the clinic which allows
patients and families to be interviewed separately and also provides more
complex cognitive assessments e.g. RUDAS, Adas-Cog, ACE-R, etc. The CDN is
available to follow-up clinic clients via home visits to complete the
assessment and to provide education, information and carer support in a more
family-friendly environment.[47]
5.71
Dr Ward noted that as part of the multi-disciplinary model, the CDN and
Geriatrician worked closely with GPs, providing feed-back on assessments,
management plans and case management.[48]
5.72
NSW Health considered that GPs and practice nurses could be supported
through integrated multi-disciplinary care models where dementia health
experts, such as CDNS and/or allied health professionals could undertake a
comprehensive assessment, with access to medical specialists if diagnosis was
unusual or difficult.[49]
5.73
Mrs Sharyn Bannister, from the Central Coast Local Health District,
explained the purpose of their memory screening service:
Our memory screening service was set up to support local GPs
with the diagnosis of dementia. The service goes into a home and completes
cognitive screens such as the Addenbrooke Frontal Assessment Battery, anxiety
and depression scales, the carer stress screening tool, and functional
assessment and histories. All information is documented in a report and sent to
the GP. We do this because we know GPs are extremely time-poor, and diagnosing
dementia is difficult. It is not like other diseases. The indicators for dementia
are varied, and all other diseases must be considered and ruled out.[50]
5.74
Associate Professor George Razay established the Launceston Memory
Disorders Clinic. Associate Professor Razay believes that a memory disorders
clinic is the most cost effective way to provide early diagnosis and treatment
for individuals:
These have contributed greatly not only to raising the
awareness of the community about memory problems and dementia but also to
changing the stigma about dementia in general and Alzheimer's disease in
particular. This has led to patients with memory disorders and carers seeking
early diagnosis and treatment. It is reflected in our data, which shows that
about 50 per cent of my patients in the memory clinic have mild cognitive
impairment.[51]
Committee comment
5.75
A multi-disciplinary approach to dementia care has been advocated to
encourage early diagnosis, as well as to facilitate early and appropriate
treatment, management and support once a diagnosis is made.
5.76
The Committee notes the numerous explanations of multi-disciplinary
memory clinics and other multi-disciplinary teams who provide diagnostic
services and support for people experiencing symptoms of memory loss or
cognitive decline.
5.77
The following features exist within the multi-disciplinary teams evidenced
before the Committee:
n Clear and established
links of communication and referrals between the specialist memory clinic and GPs;
n Visability, which
promotes greater awareness of dementia and encourages people to undertake
assessments early;
n Utilising Nurse Practitioners
or other health professionals to undertake a comprehensive assessment,
including comprehensive screening, preferably at a person’s home;
n Access to specialist
review and assessment, when required; and
n The ability to make
referrals to ongoing treatment and support services such as Alzheimer’s
Australia.
5.78
The Committee considers there is merit in exploring a nation-wide
multi-disciplinary system of dementia diagnosis and intervention, noting that
the system would need flexibility, to ensure the model provided appropriate
services and support to individual communities around Australia.
5.79
A multi-disciplinary approach, encompassing diagnosis, treatment and
support of dementia is discussed further in Chapter 6.
Specialist nurses
5.80
As discussed above, the Committee heard that a specialist nurse, such as
a Community Dementia Nurse (CDN) or Clinical Nurse Specialist was considered an
essential member of any multi-disciplinary team tasked with dementia assessment
and care.[52]
5.81
Professor Brodaty suggested that one way to address the time-consuming
nature of diagnosis was for specialist nurses to assist GPs:
Most GPs have a practice nurse who could do a lot of the
screening. They could be supported by a clinical nurse specialist. So, there
could be a network at primary level which would lead to earlier diagnosis.[53]
5.82
Alzheimer’s Australia echoed this view:
GPs work under time and financial constraints, and are in
short supply in many parts of the country, particularly in rural and regional
areas. As such, there is both a need and an opportunity to do more to improve
identification, assessment and management of dementia by facilitating the
involvement of appropriately trained and experienced nurses and other allied
health professionals. This is also important because nurses and allied health
professionals are often amongst the first to encounter people with early signs
of dementia.[54]
5.83
Ms Helga Merl, a Transitional Nurse Practitioner, told the Committee of
her role within the Hunter Medicare Local, in the assessment process for
dementia:
My role is to take referrals from GPs and practice nurses of
people they feel are at risk of dementia, people who have identified with early
symptoms, and they are thinking, ‘I am really not sure what to do, or I do not
have that time, so I would like to refer over for someone to be able to do one
of those complex assessments.’ I would be able to do those assessments,
including a physical exam and making recommendations for the pathology, the
blood tests required to look at reversible causes.[55]
5.84
Ms Merl advised that specialist nurses were able to guide practice
nurses and GPs through the diagnosis process and proposed that a NP in dementia
operate at each of the Medicare Locals across Australia.[56]
5.85
The ANF indicated that the NP role was growing within the aged care
sector and could be utilised effectively in dementia diagnosis:
The expertise of these clinicians enables them to identify
and diagnose early stage dementia, and to prescribe the appropriate treatment
modalities. This also applies to Nurse Practitioners in the mental health
field.[57]
5.86
Ms Pauline Armour, of UnitingCare Ageing (NSW and ACT), envisaged
practice nurses taking a lead role in engaging with people in health
assessments for people over 70 years of age. Ms Armour recommended that the number
of NP trained with a cognition focus be increased.[58]
5.87
Mrs Kylie Wood, a specialist occupational therapist appearing in a
private capacity, considered that one way to promote early diagnosis and
intervention was to develop opportunities to extend the scope and role of
nursing and allied health professionals to be able to diagnose dementia:
Nurse practitioner positions in dementia specific roles is an
achievable option to overcome GP reluctance and ability to diagnose accurately
and rule out all differential diagnoses which would have possibly reversible
symptoms and different disease prognoses.[59]
Committee comment
5.88
It is clear from evidence provided throughout this inquiry that specialist
nurses, such as CDNs, NPs, and Clinical Nurse Consultants, play a crucial role
in the timely diagnosis and ongoing management of dementia.
5.89
The Committee heard there was an opportunity to expand the use of
dementia care specialist nurses (whether NPs or other specialist nurses), via
an accredited training program or other such workforce development program. The
Committee supports this proposal and agrees that expanding the use of
multi-disciplinary teams in dementia diagnosis, treatment and support is an
important step in encouraging early diagnosis and intervention of dementia.
5.90
The Committee will discuss the further engagement of specialist nurses as
a case manager for people with dementia and their carers, in Chapter 6.
Recommendation 9 |
5.91
|
The Australian Government, in consultation with Health
Workforce Australia, develop an accredited training and support program to increase
capacity for specialist nurses to provide dementia assessment and diagnosis
in primary care settings, as part of multi-disciplinary teams.
|
Barriers to diagnosis in acute care
5.92
In a report produced by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
(AIHW), it was noted that identification and reporting of dementia was often
poor in hospitals. The following reasons were cited for this
under-identification:
n Difficulties of
detection and diagnosis of dementia, given the presentation of other medical
conditions;
n The brevity of
interactions between doctors and patients;
n The potential
inability of people with dementia to report symptomatic behaviour as a result
of cognitive impairments; and
n Clinical and
administrative issues.[60]
5.93
Ms Merl considered that it would be difficult to provide a diagnostic
service within a hospital, because of the presentation of acute conditions:
Often it is a delirium that people will have in hospital and,
of course, that can be misdiagnosed—when we are talking about misdiagnosis—as a
dementia. But a delirium is because there is something wrong with you, an
illness that is causing your brain to not function well. Once you get rid of
that cause—and the most common cause of delirium in older women is a urinary
tract infection; in hospitals it will be surgeries, it will be falls, it will
be lots of things—then often there is no dementia underneath that… [61]
5.94
Dr Stephen Brady, of Alice Springs Hospital, told the Committee that
access to the appropriate diagnostic tools was not always available in a
hospital setting, in areas such as Alice Springs:
In terms of early diagnosis, the earlier you try to diagnose
the better your tools need to be, and access to complex diagnostic procedures
and personnel is not always available. Doing complex psychometric testing in a
younger person who you think may be demonstrating early signs is not always
available. An MRI scan is not available here—we have to send people 1,500
kilometres away. For the younger patients we are often talking about people who
may have mixed morbidity diseases, which may be causing memory impairment, and
that expertise is not always easily available.[62]
5.95
Ms Julie Johnston, of Kimberley Aged and Community Services, advised
that there were processes and evidence-based guidelines (in the Kimberley
region) within which medical and allied health teams could work to diagnose and
treat dementia in hospitals. However, the use of these processes was
inconsistent and depended on the level of staff knowledge and experience. She
noted the application of these protocols was more consistent in regional
hospitals, than in smaller hospitals.[63]
5.96
As the focus in hospital care was on getting people well and getting
them home again, Dr Brady advised that follow up with patients was limited,
once they were discharged from hospital. Dr Brady told the Committee:
We are aware that, when we are getting them home, we are
often getting them home to somewhere that is a long way away and without a lot
of resources. We try to do what we can but we do have a very limited window in
which we can do it. We would like to be able to hand on things to be done in
the community but it does not always happen. For example, yesterday I saw a
gentleman of 85 who had been admitted from one of the communities in South
Australia with acute confusion. We had looked after him three months ago with
an acute confusional episode, which was recovering. We wanted a dementia
assessment when he returned to the community in that three months. It did not
get done.[64]
5.97
Ms Johnston said that she knew of instances where a diagnosis of
dementia was made in an acute hospital setting without undertaking any
pre-work:
… often, when a client comes into an acute hospital, a
diagnosis may be made for dementia without any prework. It is a diagnosis that
is put on when it could be a lot of other things. It could be delirium…
… with something else, quite acutely ill. But a diagnosis is
made of dementia without any substantiation of it.[65]
5.98
Ms Johnston advised that the ideal referral process within a hospital
setting involved a formal assessment (with geriatrician or psychogeriatrician
input) to confirm the diagnosis, before referring the individual on to the best
placed community-care service provider.[66]
Committee comment
5.99
The Committee was told that a hospital is often the first health setting
where a person presents with cognitive issues. However, due to the nature of
acute care, a diagnosis of dementia is often overlooked.
5.100
There are a number of barriers which prevent a diagnosis of dementia
being made in hospitals. These barriers include the limited interactions
between a patient and medical practitioners, limited hospital resources, and a
lack of connection between the hospital, the community and primary care
services.
5.101
It is vital that medical practitioners within hospitals are
appropriately educated and resourced to identify symptoms of dementia in a
hospital or acute setting when they present, and make appropriate referrals for
follow-up assessment and treatment once a person is discharged.
5.102
It was proposed to the Committee that all hospitals have Clinical Nurse
Specialists in dementia to provide staff education, carer support and important
links into the community for the person with dementia on discharge.[67]
This proposal is discussed further in Chapter 6.
5.103
Wider issues of awareness and education regarding dementia are discussed
in Chapter 3.