198 results on '"Munneke, Marten"'
Search Results
152. Additional file 1: of Palliative care for persons with Parkinsonâ s disease: a qualitative study on the experiences of health care professionals
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Lennaerts, Herma, Steppe, Maxime, Munneke, Marten, Meinders, Marjan, Steen, Jenny, Brand, Marieke, Amelsvoort, Dorian, Vissers, Kris, Bloem, Bastiaan, and Groot, Marieke
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3. Good health - Abstract
Interview guide for individual interviews and focus group discussions. (DOCX 39 kb)
153. Additional file 1: of Palliative care for persons with Parkinsonâ s disease: a qualitative study on the experiences of health care professionals
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Lennaerts, Herma, Steppe, Maxime, Munneke, Marten, Meinders, Marjan, Steen, Jenny, Brand, Marieke, Amelsvoort, Dorian, Vissers, Kris, Bloem, Bastiaan, and Groot, Marieke
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3. Good health - Abstract
Interview guide for individual interviews and focus group discussions. (DOCX 39 kb)
154. Using Online Health Communities to Deliver Patient-Centered Care to People With Chronic Conditions.
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Eijk, Martijn Van Der, Faber, Marjan J, Aarts, Johanna WM, Kremer, Jan AM, Munneke, Marten, and Bloem, Bastiaan R
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PATIENT-centered care ,INTERNET in medicine ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL informatics ,PARKINSON'S disease treatment ,MEDICAL communication ,EXPERTISE ,KNOWLEDGE management - Abstract
Background: Our health care system faces major threats as the number of people with multiple chronic conditions rises dramatically. Objective: To study the use of Online Health Communities (OHCs) as a tool to facilitate high-quality and affordable health care for future generations. Methods: OHCs are Internet-based platforms that unite either a group of patients, a group of professionals, or a mixture of both. Members interact using modern communication technologies such as blogs, chats, forums, and wikis. We illustrate the use of OHCs for ParkinsonNet, a professional network for Parkinson disease whose participants -- both patients and professionals -- use various types of OHCs to deliver patient-centered care. Results: We discuss several potential applications in clinical practice. First, due to rapid advances in medical knowledge, many health professionals lack sufficient expertise to address the complex health care needs of chronic patients. OHCs can be used to share experiences, exchange knowledge, and increase disease-specific expertise. Second, current health care delivery is fragmented, as many patients acquire relationships with multiple professionals and institutions. OHCs can bridge geographical distances and enable interdisciplinary collaboration across institutions and traditional echelons. Third, chronic patients lack adequate tools to self-manage their disease. OHCs can be used to actively engage and empower patients in their health care process and to tailor care to their individual needs. Personal health communities of individual patients offer unique opportunities to store all medical information in one central place, while allowing transparent communication across all members of each patient's health care team. Conclusions: OHCs are a powerful tool to address some of the challenges chronic care faces today. OHCs help to facilitate communication among professionals and patients and support coordination of care across traditional echelons, which does not happen spontaneously in busy practice. (J Med Internet Res 2013;15(6):e115) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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155. Revolutionising management of chronic disease: the ParkinsonNet approach
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Bloem, Bastiaan R and Munneke, Marten
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- 2014
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156. A simple method for calculating power based on a prior trial
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Borm, George F., Bloem, Bastiaan R., Munneke, Marten, and Teerenstra, Steven
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CLINICAL trials , *STANDARD deviations , *NUMERICAL calculations , *MEDICAL statistics , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *T-test (Statistics) , *PROBABILITY theory , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: When an investigator wants to base the power of a planned clinical trial on the outcome of another trial, the latter study may not have been reported in sufficient detail to allow this. For example, when the outcome is a change from baseline, the power calculation requires the standard deviation of the difference, and it frequently happens that only the standard deviations of the baseline and the follow-up measurements are reported. Also when a complex analysis or an analysis with covariates is planned, the power calculation may be difficult or impossible. The objective was to develop a method to determine the power of a trial, based on minimal information from a previous (reference) trial. Study Design and Setting: We investigated the power calculation for a range of statistical methods, including the t-test, analysis of covariance, analysis of variance, linear regression, logistic regression, Poisson regression, the Wilcoxon test, and the logrank test. Results: A method to calculate the power of a trial solely based on the P-value or the confidence interval of the outcome of the reference study. Conclusion: A power calculation based on an earlier similar trial only requires its P-value. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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157. Rationale and design to evaluate the PRIME Parkinson care model: a prospective observational evaluation of proactive, integrated and patient-centred Parkinson care in The Netherlands (PRIME-NL).
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Ypinga, Jan H. L., Van Halteren, Angelika D., Henderson, Emily J., Bloem, Bastiaan R., Smink, Agnes J., Tenison, Emma, Munneke, Marten, Ben-Shlomo, Yoav, and Darweesh, Sirwan K. L.
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PARKINSON'S disease , *MEDICAL personnel , *CHRONIC care model - Abstract
Background: Culminating evidence shows that current care does not optimally meet the needs of persons with parkinsonism, their carers and healthcare professionals. Recently, a new model of care was developed to address the limitations of usual care: Proactive and Integrated Management and Empowerment in Parkinson's Disease (PRIME Parkinson). From 2021 onwards, PRIME Parkinson care will replace usual care in a well-defined region in The Netherlands. The utility of PRIME Parkinson care will be evaluated on a single primary endpoint (parkinsonism-related complications), which reflects the health of people with parkinsonism. Furthermore, several secondary endpoints will be measured for four dimensions: health, patient and carer experience, healthcare professional experience, and cost of healthcare. The reference will be usual care, which will be continued in other regions in The Netherlands.Methods: This is a prospective observational study which will run from January 1, 2020 until December 31, 2023. Before the new model of care will replace the usual care in the PRIME Parkinson care region all baseline assessments will take place. Outcomes will be informed by two data sources. We will use healthcare claims-based data to evaluate the primary endpoint, and costs of healthcare, in all persons with parkinsonism receiving PRIME Parkinson care (estimated number: 2,000) and all persons with parkinsonism receiving usual care in the other parts of The Netherlands (estimated number: 48,000). We will also evaluate secondary endpoints by performing annual questionnaire-based assessments. These assessments will be administered to a subsample across both regions (estimated numbers: 1,200 persons with parkinsonism, 600 carers and 250 healthcare professionals).Discussion: This prospective cohort study will evaluate the utility of a novel integrated model of care for persons with parkinsonism in The Netherlands. We anticipate that the results of this study will also provide insight for the delivery of care to persons with parkinsonism in other regions and may inform the design of a similar model for other chronic health conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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158. Integrated and patient-centred management of Parkinson's disease: a network model for reshaping chronic neurological care.
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Bloem, Bastiaan R, Henderson, Emily J, Dorsey, E Ray, Okun, Michael S, Okubadejo, Njideka, Chan, Piu, Andrejack, John, Darweesh, Sirwan K L, and Munneke, Marten
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PARKINSON'S disease , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *CHRONIC diseases - Abstract
Chronic neurological diseases are the leading cause of disability globally. Yet, our health-care systems are not designed to meet the needs of many patients with chronic neurological conditions. Care is fragmented with poor interdisciplinary collaboration and lack of timely access to services and therapies. Furthermore, care is typically reactive, and complex problems are managed inadequately because of a scarcity of disease-specific expertise and insufficient use of non-pharmacological interventions. Treatment plans tend to focus on the disease rather than the individual living with it, and patients are often not involved in clinical decision making. By use of Parkinson's disease as a model condition, we show an integrated care concept with a patient-centred perspective that includes evidence-based solutions to improve health-care delivery for people with chronic neurological conditions. We anticipate that this integrated care model will improve the quality of life for patients, create a positive working environment for health-care professionals, and be affordable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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159. The cost-effectiveness of specialized nursing interventions for people with Parkinson's disease: the NICE-PD study protocol for a randomized controlled clinical trial.
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Radder, Danique L. M., Lennaerts, Herma H., Vermeulen, Hester, van Asseldonk, Thies, Delnooz, Cathérine C. S., Hagen, Rob H., Munneke, Marten, Bloem, Bastiaan R., and de Vries, Nienke M.
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PARKINSON'S disease , *BURDEN of care , *NURSING interventions , *CLINICAL trials , *MEDICAL care costs , *PATIENT compliance - Abstract
Background: Current guidelines recommend that every person with Parkinson's disease (PD) should have access to Parkinson's disease nurse specialist (PDNS) care. However, there is little scientific evidence of the cost-effectiveness of PDNS care. This hampers wider implementation, creates unequal access to care, and possibly leads to avoidable disability and costs. Therefore, we aim to study the (cost-)effectiveness of specialized nursing care provided by a PDNS compared with usual care (without PDNS) for people with PD in all disease stages. To gain more insight into the deployed interventions and their effects, a preplanned subgroup analysis will be performed on the basis of disease duration (diagnosis < 5, 5-10, or > 10 years ago).Methods: We will perform an 18-month, single-blind, randomized controlled clinical trial in eight community hospitals in the Netherlands. A total of 240 people with PD who have not been treated by a PDNS over the past 2 years will be included, independent of disease severity or duration. In each hospital, 30 patients will randomly be allocated in a 1:1 ratio to receive either care by a PDNS (who works according to a recent guideline on PDNS care) or usual care. We will use two co-primary outcomes: quality of life (measured with the Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire-39) and motor symptoms (measured with the Movement Disorders Society-sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale part III). Secondary outcomes include nonmotor symptoms, health-related quality of life, experienced quality of care, self-management, medication adherence, caregiver burden, and coping skills. Data will be collected after 12 months and 18 months by a blinded researcher. A healthcare utilization and productivity loss questionnaire will be completed every 3 months.Discussion: The results of this trial will have an immediate impact on the current care of people with PD. We hypothesize that by offering more patients access to PDNS care, quality of life will increase. We also expect healthcare costs to remain equal because increases in direct medical costs (funding additional nurses) will be offset by a reduced number of consultations with the general practitioner and neurologist. If these outcomes are reached, wide implementation of PDNS care will be warranted.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03830190. Registered February 5, 2019 (retrospectively registered). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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160. Palliative care for persons with Parkinson's disease: a qualitative study on the experiences of health care professionals.
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Lennaerts, Herma, Steppe, Maxime, Munneke, Marten, Meinders, Marjan J., van der Steen, Jenny T., Van den Brand, Marieke, van Amelsvoort, Dorian, Vissers, Kris, Bloem, Bastiaan R., and Groot, Marieke
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PALLIATIVE treatment , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CLINICAL competence , *CONTINUUM of care , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL personnel , *PARKINSON'S disease , *QUALITATIVE research , *THEMATIC analysis , *HEALTH literacy , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic and neurodegenerative disease associated with a wide variety of symptoms. The risk of complications increases with progression of the disease. These complications have a tremendous impact on the quality of life of people with PD. The aim of this study was to examine health care professionals' experiences of potential barriers and facilitators in providing palliative care for people with PD in the Netherlands. Methods: This was a qualitative descriptive study. The data were collected from 10 individual in-depth interviews and three focus groups (n = 29) with health care professionals. Health care professionals were selected based on a positive answer to the question: "In the past 2 years, did you treat or support a person with PD who subsequently died?" The data were analyzed by thematic text analysis. Results: Health care professionals supported the development of a palliative care system for PD but needed to better understand the essence of palliative care. In daily practice, they struggled to identify persons' needs due to interfering PD-specific symptoms such as cognitive decline and communication deficits. Timely addressing the personal preferences for providing palliative care was identified as an important facilitator. Health care professionals acknowledged being aware of their lack of knowledge and of their little competence in managing complex PD. Findings indicate a perceived lack of care continuity, fragmentation of services, time pressure and information discontinuity. Conclusions: Health care professionals experienced several facilitators and barriers to the provision of palliative care to people with PD. There is a need to improve the knowledge on complex PD and the continuity of information, as well as optimize coordination and deliver care based on a persons' preferences. Additional training can help to become more knowledgeable and confident. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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161. Effectiveness and costs of specialised physiotherapy given via ParkinsonNet: a retrospective analysis of medical claims data.
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Ypinga, Jan H L, de Vries, Nienke M, Boonen, Lieke H H M, Koolman, Xander, Munneke, Marten, Zwinderman, Aeilko H, and Bloem, Bastiaan R
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PHYSICAL therapy , *MEDICAL economics , *MEDICAL care costs , *COST effectiveness , *PARKINSON'S disease , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *PATIENTS , *INSURANCE statistics , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DISEASE complications , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: Parkinson's disease is a complex condition that is best managed by specialised professionals. Trials show that specialised allied health interventions are cost-effective, as compared with usual care. We aimed to study the long-term benefits of specialised physiotherapy using the ParkinsonNet approach in real-world practice.Methods: We did an observational study, retrospectively analysing a database of health insurance claims that included a representative population of Dutch patients with Parkinson's disease, who were followed for up to 3 years (Jan 1, 2013, to Dec 31, 2015). Eligibility criteria included having both a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease and having received physiotherapy for the disease. Allocation to specialised or usual care physiotherapy was based on the choices of patients and referring physicians. We used a mixed-effects model to compare health-care use and outcomes between patients treated by specialised or usual care physiotherapists. The primary outcome was the percentage of patients with a Parkinson's disease-related complication (ie, visit or admission to hospital because of fracture, other orthopaedic injuries, or pneumonia) adjusted for baseline variables. We compared physiotherapist caseload, the number of physiotherapy sessions, physiotherapy costs, and total health-care costs (including hospital care, but excluding community care, long-term care, and informal care) between the groups, and used a Cox's proportional hazard model for survival time to establish whether mortality was influenced by treatment by a specialised physiotherapist.Findings: We analysed 2129 patients (4649 observations) receiving specialised physiotherapy and 2252 patients (5353 observations) receiving usual care physiotherapy. Significantly fewer patients treated by a specialised physiotherapist had a Parkinson's disease-related complication (n=368 [17%]) than patients treated by a usual care physiotherapist (n=480 [21%]; odds ratio 0·67, 95% CI 0·56-0·81, p<0·0001). The annual caseload of patients per therapist was significantly higher for specialised physiotherapists (mean 3·89 patients per therapist [SD 3·91]) than usual care physiotherapists (1·48 [1·24]). Patients who saw specialised physiotherapists received fewer treatment sessions (mean 33·72 [SD 26·70]) than usual care physiotherapists (47·97 [32·11]). Consequently, expenditure was lower for specialised than usual care physiotherapists, both for direct costs (mean €933 [SD 843] vs €1329 [1021]; annual difference €395, 95% CI 358-432, p<0·0001) and total health-care expenditure (€2056 [3272] vs €2586 [3756]; €530, 391-669, p<0·0001). Mortality risk was lower for patients receiving specialised physiotherapy (134 [6%]) compared with patients receiving usual care physiotherapy (205 [9%], p=0·001) before correction for baseline variables, although Cox's survival model showed no significant difference between the two (hazard ratio 0·86, 95% CI 0·69-1·07, p=0·195).Interpretation: These results confirm the findings from controlled trials, and offer evidence that specialised physiotherapy as delivered through ParkinsonNet is associated with fewer Parkinson's disease-related complications and lower costs in real-world practice. Neurologists can facilitate specialised physiotherapy by specific referral to such experts.Funding: None. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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162. Economic evaluation of occupational therapy in Parkinson's disease: A randomized controlled trial.
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Sturkenboom, Ingrid H.W.M., Hendriks, Jan C.M., Graff, Maud J.L., Adang, Eddy M.M., Munneke, Marten, Nijhuis-van der Sanden, Maria W.G., and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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Background A large randomized clinical trial (the Occupational Therapy in Parkinson's Disease [OTiP] study) recently demonstrated that home-based occupational therapy improves perceived performance in daily activities of people with Parkinson's disease (PD). The aim of the current study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of this intervention. Methods We performed an economic evaluation over a 6-month period for both arms of the OTiP study. Participants were 191 community-dwelling PD patients and 180 primary caregivers. The intervention group (n = 124 patients) received 10 weeks of home-based occupational therapy; the control group (n = 67 patients) received usual care (no occupational therapy). Costs were assessed from a societal perspective including healthcare use, absence from work, informal care, and intervention costs. Health utilities were evaluated using EuroQol-5d. We estimated cost differences and cost utility using linear mixed models and presented the net monetary benefit at different values for willingness to pay per quality-adjusted life-year gained. Results In our primary analysis, we excluded informal care hours because of substantial missing data for this item. The estimated mean total costs for the intervention group compared with controls were €125 lower for patients, €29 lower for caregivers, and €122 higher for patient-caregiver pairs (differences not significant). At a value of €40,000 per quality-adjusted life-year gained (reported threshold for PD), the net monetary benefit of the intervention per patient was €305 ( P = 0.74), per caregiver €866 ( P = 0.01) and per patient-caregiver pair €845 ( P = 0.24). Conclusion In conclusion, occupational therapy did not significantly impact on total costs compared with usual care. Positive cost-effectiveness of the intervention was only significant for caregivers. © 2015 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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163. Perspectives on Parkinson Disease Care in Dutch Nursing Homes.
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van Rumund, Anouke, Weerkamp, Nico, Tissingh, Gerrit, Zuidema, Sytse U., Koopmans, Raymond T., Munneke, Marten, Poels, Petra J.E., and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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PARKINSON'S disease treatment , *DOPA , *ELDER care , *CAREGIVERS , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *LONG-term health care , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL quality control , *PATIENT-professional relations , *NURSING home patients , *NURSING care facilities , *NURSING home employees , *PATIENT satisfaction , *PERSONNEL management , *QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Introduction Parkinson's disease (PD) is a complex and disabling disorder. Ultimately, 20% to 40% of patients are admitted to a nursing home, and neurologists often lose track of these patients. Care and treatment of these institutionalized patients have not been addressed comprehensively, but anecdotal reports suggest it is suboptimal. We conducted a qualitative study to analyze the quality of PD care in Dutch nursing homes from the perspective of residents, caregivers, and health care workers. Methods Experiences and (unmet) needs of 15 nursing home residents with PD and parkinsonism (90% Hoehn and Yahr stage 4 and 5) and 15 informal caregivers were assessed using semistructured interviews. Furthermore, 5 focus group discussions were organized with 13 nurses and 22 other health care professionals to explore the experiences and barriers of PD care. Results Three core unmet needs were identified: (1) unsatisfactory empathy and emotional support, according to residents and informal caregivers; (2) insufficient staff knowledge on PD-related issues, such as motor fluctuations, leading to poorly timed administration of levodopa; (3) suboptimal organization of care with limited access to neurologists and specialized PD nurses. Conclusions PD care in Dutch nursing homes is suboptimal according to residents, informal caregivers, and health care workers. Three core areas for improvement were identified, including greater attention for psychosocial problems, improved PD-specific knowledge among nursing home staff, and better collaboration with hospital staff trained in movement disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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164. Efficacy of occupational therapy for patients with Parkinson's disease: a randomised controlled trial.
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Sturkenboom, Ingrid H W M, Graff, Maud J L, Hendriks, Jan C M, Veenhuizen, Yvonne, Munneke, Marten, Bloem, Bastiaan R, and der Sanden, Maria W Nijhuis-van
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HEALTH outcome assessment , *PARKINSON'S disease treatment , *OCCUPATIONAL therapy , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *BRAIN diseases , *EXTRAPYRAMIDAL disorders - Abstract
Summary: Background: There is insufficient evidence to support use of occupational therapy interventions for patients with Parkinson's disease. We aimed to assess the efficacy of occupational therapy in improving daily activities of patients with Parkinson's disease. Methods: We did a multicentre, assessor-masked, randomised controlled clinical trial in ten hospitals in nine Dutch regional networks of specialised health-care professionals (ParkinsonNet), with assessment at 3 months and 6 months. Patients with Parkinson's disease with self-reported difficulties in daily activities were included, along with their primary caregivers. Patients were randomly assigned (2:1) to the intervention or control group by a computer-generated minimisation algorithm. The intervention consisted of 10 weeks of home-based occupational therapy according to national practice guidelines; control individuals received usual care with no occupational therapy. The primary outcome was self-perceived performance in daily activities at 3 months, assessed with the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (score 1–10). Data were analysed using linear mixed models for repeated measures (intention-to-treat principle). Assessors monitored safety by asking patients about any unusual health events during the preceding 3 months. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01336127. Findings: Between April 14, 2011, and Nov 2, 2012, 191 patients were randomly assigned to the intervention group (n=124) or the control group (n=67). 117 (94%) of 124 patients in the intervention group and 63 (94%) of 67 in the control group had a participating caregiver. At baseline, the median score on the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure was 4·3 (IQR 3·5–5·0) in the intervention group and 4·4 (3·8–5·0) in the control group. At 3 months, these scores were 5·8 (5·0–6·4) and 4·6 (4·6–6·6), respectively. The adjusted mean difference in score between groups at 3 months was in favour of the intervention group (1·2; 95% CI 0·8–1·6; p<0·0001). There were no adverse events associated with the study. Interpretation: Home-based, individualised occupational therapy led to an improvement in self-perceived performance in daily activities in patients with Parkinson's disease. Further work should identify which factors related to the patient, environmental context, or therapist might predict which patients are most likely to benefit from occupational therapy. Funding: Prinses Beatrix Spierfonds and Parkinson Vereniging. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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165. Consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in patients with Parkinson's disease.
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van der Marck, Marjolein A., Klok, Margit Ph.C., Okun, Michael S., Giladi, Nir, Munneke, Marten, and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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ACCIDENTAL fall prevention , *PARKINSON'S disease patients , *MEDICAL personnel , *NEUROLOGISTS , *AGE factors in disease , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Abstract: Falls in Parkinson's disease (PD) are common and frequently devastating. Falls prevention is an urgent priority, but there is no accepted program that specifically addresses the risk profile in PD. Therefore, we aimed to provide consensus-based clinical practice recommendations that systematically address potential fall risk factors in PD. We developed an overview of both generic (age-related) and PD-specific factors. For each factor, we specified: best method of ascertainment; disciplines that should be involved in assessment and treatment; and which interventions could be engaged. Using a web-based tool, we asked 27 clinically active professionals from multiple relevant disciplines to evaluate this overview. The revised version was subsequently reviewed by 12 experts. Risk factors and their associated interventions were included in the final set of recommendations when at least 66% of reviewing experts agreed. These recommendations included 31 risk factors. Nearly all required a multidisciplinary team approach, usually involving a neurologist and PD-nurse specialist. Finally, the expert panel proposed to first identify the specific fall type and to tailor screening and treatment accordingly. A routine evaluation of all risk factors remains reserved for high-risk patients without prior falls, or for patients with seemingly unexplained falls. In conclusion, this project produced a set of consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in PD. These may be used in two ways: for pragmatic use in current clinical practice, pending further evidence; and as the active intervention in clinical trials, aiming to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of large scale implementation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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166. Parkinson Disease in Long Term Care Facilities: A Review of the Literature.
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Weerkamp, Nico J., Tissingh, Gerrit, Poels, Petra J.E., Zuidema, Syste U., Munneke, Marten, Koopmans, Raymond T.C.M., and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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PARKINSON'S disease diagnosis , *PARKINSON'S disease treatment , *LONG-term health care , *NURSING home patients , *NURSING care facilities , *PARKINSON'S disease , *SEVERITY of illness index - Abstract
Abstract: Parkinson disease (PD) is common in long term care (LTC) facilities. The number of institutionalized patients with PD will rise sharply in the coming decades because of 2 concurrent phenomena: aging of the population leads to an increased PD prevalence and improved quality of care has led to a prolonged survival in advanced disease stages. Only a few studies have investigated the prevalence and clinical characteristics of patients with PD in LTC facilities. Even fewer studies have addressed the treatment strategies used to support these institutionalized patients, who are mostly in advanced stages of the disease. The available evidence suggests that current management of patients with PD in LTC facilities is less than optimal. In the Netherlands, and we suspect in many other countries, there are no formal guidelines for treating patients with PD who have been admitted to a LTC facility. In this review, we describe the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, and clinical management of patients with PD in LTC settings. We also address potentially modifiable elements of care and provide several recommendations to improve the management of PD in these facilities. We conclude by suggesting a possible guide for future research in this area. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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167. Nonmotor Symptoms in Nursing Home Residents with Parkinson's Disease: Prevalence and Effect on Quality of Life.
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Weerkamp, Nico J., Tissingh, Gerrit, Poels, Petra J.E., Zuidema, Systse U., Munneke, Marten, Koopmans, Raymond T.C.M., and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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CONFIDENCE intervals , *NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *NURSING home patients , *PARKINSON'S disease , *QUALITY of life , *REGRESSION analysis , *DISEASE prevalence , *CROSS-sectional method , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SYMPTOMS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objectives To determine the prevalence of nonmotor symptoms ( NMS) in nursing home ( NH) residents with Parkinson's disease ( PD) and to establish the association with quality of life. Design Cross-sectional. Setting Nursing homes in the southeast of the Netherlands. Participants Nursing home residents with PD and a Mini- Mental State Examination score of 18 or greater (N = 73; mean age 78.7, disease duration 10 years, mainly Hoehn and Yahr Stages 4 (38%) and 5 (49%)) underwent detailed examination to determine the prevalence of NMS. Measurements Validated instruments for PD-related NMS were used to examine the NH residents with PD. The overall burden of NMS, and autonomic problems in particular, were measured using the Non- Motor Symptoms Scale ( NMSS). Depression, neuropsychiatric symptoms, sleep problems, cognitive dysfunction, and motor impairments were focused on in further detail using established clinimetric tests. Linear regression analysis was used to examine the relationship between these symptoms and quality of life, which was measured using the Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire ( PDQ-8). Results The NMSS revealed a mean of nearly 13 different NMS per resident. Autonomic problems (constipation, urinary urgency) were particularly prevalent (48-75% of residents). Depressive symptoms were present in 45%. The most prevalent neuropsychiatric symptoms other than depression were irritability and apathy. The most common sleep problems were overall poor nighttime sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, and nocturia. Cognitive problems were highly prevalent, and 77% of the residents met the criteria for PD-related dementia. High scores were also obtained for motor impairments. Mean PDQ-8 score was high, indicating poor quality of life. Poor quality of life was most strongly associated with the prevalence and severity of overall NMS burden (coefficient of determination = 0.45). Conclusion Nonmotor symptoms were highly prevalent in NH residents with PD. Quality of life was poor, largely because of NMS. Because many NMS are potentially treatable, diagnosis and treatment of these severely affected individuals deserve more attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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168. Patient-centeredness in PD care: Development and validation of a patient experience questionnaire
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van der Eijk, Martijn, Faber, Marjan J., Ummels, Inez, Aarts, Johanna W.M., Munneke, Marten, and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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CARE of Parkinson's disease patients , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MEDICAL quality control , *MEDICAL records , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Abstract: Introduction: Patient-centeredness is increasingly recognized as a crucial element of quality of care. A suitable instrument to assess the level of patient-centeredness for Parkinson''s disease (PD) care is lacking. Here we describe the development and validation of the Patient-Centered Questionnaire for PD (PCQ-PD), and its initial application in a large patient sample. Methods: Based on the outcomes of eight focus groups we composed a questionnaire that measures patient-centeredness by assessing patients'' care experiences. The questionnaire was sent to 1112 Dutch PD patients, and face-, content- and construct-validity and reliability were assessed. The level of patient-centeredness was determined by calculating scores for overall patient-centeredness [0–3], subscale experiences [0–3], item experience, item priority and quality improvement. Results: 895 PD patients (net response 82.0%) completed the questionnaire. After the validation procedure, the PCQ-PD addressed 46 care aspects in six different subscales of patient-centeredness. The internal consistency of the instrument, expressed in Cronbach''s α per subscale, ranged from 0.62 to 0.84. The overall patient-centeredness score was 1.69 (SD 0.45). ‘Emotional support’ (1.05, SD 0.90) and ‘provision of tailored information’ (1.18, SD 0.57) subscales received the lowest experience ratings. ‘Access to medical records’ obtained the highest item quality improvement score (5.44). Conclusions: This study produced a valid instrument to measure patient-centeredness in PD care. Psychometric properties of the instrument were good. Application of the PCQ-PD revealed the level of patient-centeredness in the care for PD patients in The Netherlands. The main outcome was a compelling call for the provision of tailored information and emotional support. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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169. Body mass index in Parkinson’s disease: A meta-analysis
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van der Marck, Marjolein A., Dicke, Heleen C., Uc, Ergun Y., Kentin, Zippora H.A., Borm, George F., Bloem, Bastiaan R., Overeem, Sebastiaan, and Munneke, Marten
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PARKINSON'S disease , *BODY mass index , *NUTRITIONAL assessment , *META-analysis , *CONTROL groups , *MEDICAL statistics - Abstract
Abstract: Prior work suggested that patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) have a lower Body Mass Index (BMI) than controls, but evidence is inconclusive. We therefore conducted a meta-analysis on BMI in PD. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cinahl and Scopus to identify cohort studies on BMI in PD, published before February 2011. Studies that reported mean BMI for PD patients and healthy controls were eligible. Twelve studies were included, with a total of 871 patients and 736 controls (in three studies controls consisted of subjects from other published studies). Our primary aim was to assess differences in BMI between patients and controls; this was analyzed with random effects meta-analysis. Our secondary aim was to evaluate the relation with disease severity (Hoehn and Yahr stage) and disease duration, using random effects meta-regression. PD patients had a significantly lower BMI than controls (overall effect 1.73, 95% CI 1.11–2.35, P <0.001). Pooled data of seven studies showed that patients with Hoehn and Yahr stage 3 had a lower BMI than patients with stage 2 (3.9, 95% CI 0.1–7.7, P <0.05). Disease duration was not associated with BMI. Because a low body weight is associated with negative health effects and a poorer prognosis, monitoring weight and nutritional status should be part of PD management. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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170. Freezer or non-freezer: Clinical assessment of freezing of gait
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Snijders, Anke H., Haaxma, Charlotte A., Hagen, Yolien J., Munneke, Marten, and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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PARKINSON'S disease , *GAIT disorders , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *CLASSIFICATION , *MEDICAL statistics - Abstract
Abstract: Introduction: Freezing of gait (FOG) is both common and debilitating in patients with Parkinson''s disease (PD). Future pathophysiology studies will depend critically upon adequate classification of patients as being either ‘freezers’ or ‘non-freezers’. This classification should be based ideally upon objective confirmation by an experienced observer during clinical assessment. Given the known difficulties to elicit FOG when examining patients, we aimed to investigate which simple clinical test would be the most sensitive to provoke FOG objectively. Methods: We examined 50 patients with PD, including 32 off-state freezers (defined as experiencing subjective ‘gluing of the feet to the floor’). Assessment including a FOG trajectory (three trials: normal speed, fast speed, and with dual tasking) and several turning variants (180° vs. 360° turns; leftward vs. rightward turns; wide vs. narrow turning; and slow vs. fast turns). Results: Sensitivity of the entire assessment to provoke FOG in subjective freezers was 0.74, specificity was 0.94. The most effective test to provoke FOG was rapid 360° turns in both directions and, if negative, combined with a gait trajectory with dual tasking. Repeated testing improved the diagnostic yield. The least informative tests included wide turns, 180° turns or normal speed full turns. Sensitivity to provoke objective FOG in subjective freezers was 0.65 for the rapid full turns in both directions and 0.63 for the FOG trajectory. Discussion: The most efficient way to objectively ascertain FOG is asking patients to repeatedly make rapid 360° narrow turns from standstill, on the spot and in both directions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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171. Moving towards patient-centered healthcare for patients with Parkinson’s disease
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van der Eijk, Martijn, Faber, Marjan J., Al Shamma, Sara, Munneke, Marten, and Bloem, Bastiaan R.
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MEDICAL care , *PARKINSON'S disease , *MOVEMENT disorder treatments , *CAREGIVERS , *DECISION making , *NEEDS assessment - Abstract
Abstract: Introduction: Quality of care is becoming increasingly important in the field of movement disorders. Patient-centeredness is a crucial element of quality of care, but has thus far received limited attention regarding the treatment of movement disorder syndromes. As a first step towards patient-centered care in Parkinson’s disease (PD), we explored the unmet needs of PD patients and their informal caregivers. Methods: Eight focus group discussions involving 40 PD patients (mean age 62 years, Hoehn & Yahr stage 1–3) and 20 informal caregivers (mean age 63 years) were organized to explore the experiences in relation to patient-centered care. The key elements of patient-centeredness – as defined by the Picker Institute and the World Health Organization – were used as a framework for discussion and qualitative analysis. Results: Patients and informal caregivers desired more emotional support from healthcare professionals, and wanted more active involvement in clinical decision making, but currently lacked sufficient information to do so. Participants also missed the tools to find professionals with PD expertise. Finally, they identified a lack of multidisciplinary collaboration as a major bottleneck in the current healthcare system. Conclusions: We identified various unmet needs among PD patients and informal caregivers. These joint experiences represent a disease-specific model of patient-centeredness for PD, which can assist healthcare professionals in implementing patient-centered care tailored to the preferences of each individual patient. The present findings will be used to construct a patient-centeredness questionnaire for PD that will clarify the quality of care from a patient’s perspective. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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172. Falls in Spinocerebellar Ataxias: Results of the EuroSCA Fall Study.
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Fonteyn, Ella M. R., Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja, Verstappen, Carla C., Baliko, Laslo, Bloem, Bastiaan R., Boesch, Silvia, Bunn, Lisa, Charles, Perrine, Dürr, Alexandra, Filla, Allesandro, Giunti, Paola, Globas, Christoph, Klockgether, Thomas, Melegh, Bela, Pandolfo, Massimo, Rosa, Anna De, Schöls, Ludger, Timmann, Dagmar, Munneke, Marten, and Kremer, Berry P. H.
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FRIEDREICH'S ataxia , *GENETIC disorders , *CEREBELLUM degeneration , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DYSTONIA , *EXTRAPYRAMIDAL disorders - Abstract
To investigate the frequency, details, and consequences of falls in patients with autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) and to derive specific disease-related risk factors that are associated with an increased fall frequency. Two hundred twenty-eight patients with SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, or SCA6, recruited from the EuroSCA natural history study, completed a fall questionnaire that assessed the frequency, consequences, and several details of falls in the previous 12 months. Relevant disease characteristics were retrieved from the EuroSCA registry. The database of the natural history study provided the ataxia severity scores as well as the number and nature of non-ataxia symptoms. Patients (73.6%) reported at least one fall in the preceding 12 months. There was a high rate of fall-related injuries (74%). Factors that were associated with a higher fall frequency included: disease duration, severity of ataxia, the presence of pyramidal symptoms, the total number of non-ataxia symptoms, and the genotype SCA3. Factors associated with a lower fall frequency were: the presence of extrapyramidal symptoms (more specifically dystonia of the lower limbs) and the genotype SCA2. The total number of non-ataxia symptoms and longer disease duration were independently associated with a higher fall frequency in a logistic regression analysis, while the presence of extrapyramidal symptoms was independently associated with a lower fall frequency. Our findings indicate that, in addition to more obvious factors that are associated with frequent falls, such as disease duration and ataxia severity, non-ataxia manifestations in SCA play a major role in the fall etiology of these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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173. Impact of drooling in Parkinson's disease.
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Kalf, Johanna G., Smit, Anne M., Bloem, Bastiaan R., Zwarts, Machiel J., and Munneke, Marten
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DROOLING , *MOUTH abnormalities , *ORAL habits , *PARKINSON'S disease , *BRAIN diseases , *EXTRAPYRAMIDAL disorders , *QUALITY of life , *HEALTH surveys - Abstract
Drooling is a wellknown problem in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). The aim of this study was to investigate the severity and consequences of drooling in PD. A comprehensive drooling questionnaire was sent to 105 PD outpatients, who had volunteered drooling during a previous questionnaire (n = 216). Among 63 patients who responded and confirmed drooling, 27% experienced severe saliva loss. Social and emotional consequences were reported by 17% to 77% of patients, and significantly more often by those with severe drooling. We conclude that drooling is a frequent, disabling and apparently undertreated symptom of PD. History taking ought to be detailed and specific to understand the full impact of drooling for an individual patient. Therapeutic options should be evaluated more intensively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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174. A systematic review of bio-psychosocial risk factors for an unfavourable outcome after lumbar disc surgery.
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den Boer, Jasper J., Oostendorp, Rob A. B., Beems, Tjemme, Munneke, Marten, Oerlemans, Margreet, and Evers, Andrea W. M.
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INTERVERTEBRAL disk surgery , *LUMBAR vertebrae , *PREOPERATIVE risk factors , *SURGERY & psychology , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PREOPERATIVE care - Abstract
The objective of this systematic review is to summarize scientific evidence concerning the predictive value of bio-psychosocial risk factors with regard to the outcome after lumbar disc surgery. Medical and psychological databases were used to locate potentially relevant articles, which resulted in the selection of 11 studies. Each of these studies has a prospective design that examined the predictive value of preoperative variables for the outcome of lumbar disc surgery. Results indicated that socio-demographic, clinical, work-related as well as psychological factors predict lumbar disc surgery outcome. Findings showed relatively consistently that a lower level of education, a higher level of preoperative pain, less work satisfaction, a longer duration of sick leave, higher levels of psychological complaints and more passive avoidance coping function as predictors of an unfavourable outcome in terms of pain, disability, work capacity, or a combination of these outcome measures. The results of this review provide preliminary opportunities to select patients at risk for an unfavourable outcome. However, further systematic and methodologically high quality research is required, particularly for those predictors that can be positively influenced by multidisciplinary interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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175. Increased carotid wall thickening after radiotherapy on the neck
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Dorresteijn, Lucille D.A., Kappelle, Arnoud C., Scholz, Natasja M.J., Munneke, Marten, Scholma, José T., Balm, Alfons J.M., Bartelink, Harry, and Boogerd, Willem
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CAROTID artery diseases , *PATIENTS , *RADIOTHERAPY , *ULTRASONIC imaging - Abstract
Abstract: Patients treated for head and neck tumours with local radiotherapy (RT) on the neck harbour an increased risk of stroke. This may be due to accelerated atherosclerotic changes within the RT-field; however, the real impact of local RT on the carotid artery remains debatable. The aim of the present study was to assess the difference in carotid wall thickness (intima-media thickness) in 42 unilaterally irradiated parotid tumour patients by performing B-mode ultrasonography. A mean difference in intima-media thickness (IMT) of the irradiated compared with the non-irradiated carotid artery of 0.30mm (P =0.031) was found. A significant correlation was established with a longer post-RT interval (P =0.008). RT on the neck is associated with increased thickening of carotid IMT. Screening and treatment of additional cerebrovascular risk factors which contribute to further IMT thickening and stroke development is recommended, especially in radiotherapy patients with a favourable prognosis. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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176. The PRIME-NL study: evaluating a complex healthcare intervention for people with Parkinson's disease in a dynamic environment.
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Maas BR, van den Bergh R, van den Berg SW, Hulstein E, Stadhouders N, Jeurissen PPT, de Vries NM, Bloem BR, Munneke M, Ben-Shlomo Y, and Darweesh SKL
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- Humans, Netherlands epidemiology, Male, Female, Aged, Prospective Studies, Middle Aged, Caregivers, Delivery of Health Care, Parkinson Disease therapy, Parkinson Disease epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: An innovative, integrative care model for people with Parkinson (PRIME Parkinson) has gradually been implemented in a selected region of the Netherlands since 2021. A prospective evaluation of this model (PRIME-NL study) was initiated in parallel, spanning the year prior to implementation (baseline) and the implementation period. Following publication of the original study protocol, the COVID-19 crisis delayed implementation of the full PRIME Parkinson care model by two years and hampered the recruitment of study participants., Objective: To describe which methodological adjustments were made to the study protocol because of these developments., Methods: We compare various outcomes between a region where PRIME Parkinson care was implemented (innovation region) versus the rest of the Netherlands (usual care region). We use healthcare claims data of virtually all people with Parkinson in the Netherlands and annual questionnaires in a representative subsample of 984 people with Parkinson, 566 caregivers and 192 healthcare professionals. Four major methodological adjustments had to be made since publication of the original protocol. First, we extended the evaluation period by two years. Second, we incorporated annual process measures of the stage of implementation of the new care model. Third, we introduced a real-time iterative feedback loop of interim results to relevant stakeholders. Fourth, we updated the statistical analysis plan., Discussion: This manuscript provides transparency in how the design and analyses of the evaluation study had to be adapted to control for external influences in a dynamic environment, including eruption of the COVID-19 crisis. Our solutions could serve as a template for evaluating other complex healthcare interventions in a dynamic environment., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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177. Assessing the validity of a Parkinson's care evaluation: the PRIME-NL study.
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Gelissen LMY, van den Bergh R, Talebi AH, Geerlings AD, Maas BR, Burgler MM, Kroeze Y, Smink A, Bloem BR, Munneke M, Ben-Shlomo Y, and Darweesh SKL
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- Humans, Male, Female, Netherlands, Aged, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Prospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Aged, 80 and over, Parkinson Disease therapy
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Introduction: The PRIME-NL study prospectively evaluates a new integrated and personalized care model for people with parkinsonism, including Parkinson's disease, in a selected region (PRIME) in the Netherlands. We address the generalizability and sources of selection and confounding bias of the PRIME-NL study by examining baseline and 1-year compliance data., Methods: First, we assessed regional baseline differences between the PRIME and the usual care (UC) region using healthcare claims data of almost all people with Parkinson's disease in the Netherlands (the source population). Second, we compared our questionnaire sample to the source population to determine generalizability. Third, we investigated sources of bias by comparing the PRIME and UC questionnaire sample on baseline characteristics and 1-year compliance., Results: Baseline characteristics were similar in the PRIME (n = 1430) and UC (n = 26,250) source populations. The combined questionnaire sample (n = 920) was somewhat younger and had a slightly longer disease duration than the combined source population. Compared to the questionnaire sample in the PRIME region, the UC questionnaire sample was slightly younger, had better cognition, had a longer disease duration, had a higher educational attainment and consumed more alcohol. 1-year compliance of the questionnaire sample was higher in the UC region (96%) than in the PRIME region (92%)., Conclusion: The generalizability of the PRIME-NL study seems to be good, yet we found evidence of some selection bias. This selection bias necessitates the use of advanced statistical methods for the final evaluation of PRIME-NL, such as inverse probability weighting or propensity score matching. The PRIME-NL study provides a unique window into the validity of a large-scale care evaluation for people with a chronic disease, in this case parkinsonism., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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178. Delivering Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation Care in Parkinson's Disease: An International Consensus Statement.
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Goldman JG, Volpe D, Ellis TD, Hirsch MA, Johnson J, Wood J, Aragon A, Biundo R, Di Rocco A, Kasman GS, Iansek R, Miyasaki J, McConvey VM, Munneke M, Pinto S, St Clair KA, Toledo S, York MK, Todaro R, Yarab N, and Wallock K
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- Humans, Quality of Life, Speech Therapy, Parkinson Disease, Occupational Therapy, Disabled Persons
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Background: Parkinson's disease (PD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder impacting everyday function and quality of life. Rehabilitation plays a crucial role in improving symptoms, function, and quality of life and reducing disability, particularly given the lack of disease-modifying agents and limitations of medications and surgical therapies. However, rehabilitative care is under-recognized and under-utilized in PD and often only utilized in later disease stages, despite research and guidelines demonstrating its positive effects. Currently, there is a lack of consensus regarding fundamental topics related to rehabilitative services in PD., Objective: The goal of the international Parkinson's Foundation Rehabilitation Medicine Task Force was to develop a consensus statement regarding the incorporation of rehabilitation in PD care., Methods: The Task Force, comprised of international multidisciplinary experts in PD and rehabilitation and people directly affected by PD, met virtually to discuss topics such as rehabilitative services, existing therapy guidelines and rehabilitation literature in PD, and gaps and needs. A systematic, interactive, and iterative process was used to develop consensus-based statements on core components of PD rehabilitation and discipline-specific interventions., Results: The expert-based consensus statement outlines key tenets of rehabilitative care including its multidisciplinary approach and discipline-specific guidance for occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech language pathology/therapy, and psychology/neuropsychology across all PD stages., Conclusions: Rehabilitative interventions should be an essential component in the comprehensive treatment of PD, from diagnosis to advanced disease. Greater education and awareness of the benefits of rehabilitative services for people with PD and their care partners, and further evidence-based and scientific study are encouraged.
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- 2024
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179. Caregiver burden in Parkinson's disease: a mixed-methods study.
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Geerlings AD, Kapelle WM, Sederel CJ, Tenison E, Wijngaards-Berenbroek H, Meinders MJ, Munneke M, Ben-Shlomo Y, Bloem BR, and Darweesh SKL
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Cross-Sectional Studies, Netherlands, Middle Aged, Qualitative Research, Surveys and Questionnaires, Caregiver Burden etiology, Caregiver Burden psychology, Caregiver Burden therapy, Caregivers psychology, Cost of Illness, Parkinson Disease psychology, Parkinson Disease therapy, Quality of Life psychology
- Abstract
Background: Providing informal care for a person with Parkinson's disease (PD) can be a demanding process affecting several dimensions of a caregiver's life and potentially causing caregiver burden. Despite the emerging literature on caregiver burden in people with PD, little is known about the inter-relationship between quantitative and qualitative findings. Filling this knowledge gap will provide a more holistic approach to develop and design innovations aiming at reducing or even preventing caregiver burden. This study aimed to characterize the determinants of caregiver burden among informal caregivers of persons with PD, in order to facilitate the development of tailored interventions that reduce caregiver burden., Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study in The Netherlands using a sequential mixed methods approach, entailing a quantitative study of 504 persons with PD and their informal caregivers as well as a qualitative study in a representative subsample of 17 informal caregivers. The quantitative study included a standardized questionnaire of caregiver burden (Zarit Burden Inventory) and patient-related (Beck Depression Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Acceptance of Illness Scale, MDS-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale part II on motor functions in daily life, Self-assessment Parkinson's Disease Disability Score), caregiver-related (Brief Coping Orientation to Problems Experience Inventory, Caregiver Activation Measurement, Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support) and interpersonal determinants (sociodemographic variables including among others gender, age, education, marital status and working status). The qualitative study consisted of semi-structured interviews. Multivariable regression and thematic analysis were used to analyse quantitative and qualitative data, respectively., Results: A total of 337 caregivers were women (66.9%), and the majority of people with PD were men (N = 321, 63.7%). The mean age of persons with PD was 69.9 (standard deviation [SD] 8.1) years, and the mean disease duration was 7.2 (SD 5.2) years. A total of 366 (72.6%) persons with PD had no active employment. The mean age of informal caregivers was 67.5 (SD 9.2) years. Most informal caregivers were female (66.9%), had no active employment (65.9%) and were the spouse of the person with PD (90.7%). The mean Zarit Burden Inventory score was 15.9 (SD 11.7). The quantitative study showed that a lack of active employment of the person affected by PD was associated with a higher caregiver burden. The qualitative study revealed cognitive decline and psychological or emotional deficits of the person with PD as additional patient-related determinants of higher caregiver burden. The following caregiver-related and interpersonal determinants were associated with higher caregiver burden: low social support (quantitative study), concerns about the future (qualitative study), the caregiving-induced requirement of restrictions in everyday life (qualitative study), changes in the relationship with the person with PD (qualitative study) and a problem-focused or avoidant coping style (both studies). Integration of both data strands revealed that qualitative findings expanded quantitative findings by (1) distinguishing between the impact of the relationship with the person with PD and the relationship with others on perceived social support, (2) revealing the impact of non-motor symptoms next to motor symptoms and (3) revealing the following additional factors impacting caregiver burden: concern about the future, perceived restrictions and limitations in performing daily activities due to the disease, and negative feelings and emotional well-being. Qualitative findings were discordant with the quantitative finding demonstrating that problem-focused was associated with a higher caregiver burden. Factor analyses showed three sub-dimensions of the Zarit Burden Inventory: (i) role intensity and resource strain, (2) social restriction and anger and (3) self-criticism. Quantitative analysis showed that avoidant coping was a determinant for all three subscales, whereas problem-solved coping and perceived social support were significant predictors on two subscales, role intensity and resource strain and self-criticism., Conclusions: The burden experienced by informal caregivers of persons with PD is determined by a complex interplay of patient-related, caregiver-related and interpersonal characteristics. Our study highlights the utility of a mixed-methods approach to unravel the multidimensional burden experienced by informal caregivers of persons with chronic disease. We also offer starting points for the development of a tailored supportive approach for caregivers., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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180. Case management interventions in chronic disease reduce anxiety and depressive symptoms: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Geerlings AD, Janssen Daalen JM, Ypinga JHL, Bloem BR, Meinders MJ, Munneke M, and Darweesh SKL
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- Humans, Case Management, Anxiety therapy, Chronic Disease, Psychotherapy, Depression therapy
- Abstract
Background: There is no systematic insight into the effect of case management on common complications of chronic diseases, including depressive symptoms and symptoms of anxiety. This is a significant knowledge gap, given that people with a chronic disease such as Parkinson Disease or Alzheimer's Disease have identified care coordination as one of their highest priorities. Furthermore, it remains unclear whether the putative beneficial effects of case management would vary by crucial patient characteristics, such as their age, gender, or disease characteristics. Such insights would shift from "one size fits all" healthcare resource allocation to personalized medicine., Objective: We systematically examined the effectiveness of case management interventions on two common complications associated PD and other chronic health conditions: Depressive symptoms and symptoms of anxiety., Methods: We identified studies published until November 2022 from PubMed and Embase databases using predefined inclusion criteria. For each study, data were extracted independently by two researchers. First, descriptive and qualitative analyses of all included studies were performed, followed by random-effects meta-analyses to assess the impact of case management interventions on anxiety and depressive symptoms. Second, meta-regression was performed to analyze potential modifying effects of demographic characteristics, disease characteristics and case management components., Results: 23 randomized controlled trials and four non-randomized studies reported data on the effect of case management on symptoms of anxiety (8 studies) or depressive symptoms (26 studies). Across meta-analyses, we observed a statistically significant effect of case management on reducing symptoms of anxiety (Standardized Mean Difference [SMD] = - 0.47; 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.69, -0.32) and depressive symptoms (SMD = - 0.48; CI: -0.71, -0.25). We found large heterogeneity in effect estimates across studies, but this was not explained by patient population or intervention characteristics., Conclusions: Among people with chronic health conditions, case management has beneficial effects on symptoms of depressive symptoms and symptoms of anxiety. Currently, research on case management interventions are rare. Future studies should assess the utility of case management for potentially preventative and common complications, focusing on the optimal content, frequency, and intensity of case management., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exists., (Copyright: © 2023 Geerlings et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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181. Proactive and Integrated Management and Empowerment in Parkinson's Disease protocol for a randomised controlled trial (PRIME-UK) to evaluate a new model of care.
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Lithander FE, Tenison E, Ypinga J, Halteren A, Smith MD, Lloyd K, Richfield EW, Brazier DE, Ó Breasail M, Smink AJ, Metcalfe C, Hollingworth W, Bloem B, Munneke M, Ben-Shlomo Y, Darweesh SKL, and Henderson EJ
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- Adult, Humans, Quality of Life, Hospitalization, Informed Consent, United Kingdom, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease therapy
- Abstract
Background: People living with Parkinson's disease experience progressive motor and non-motor symptoms, which negatively impact on health-related quality of life and can lead to an increased risk of hospitalisation. It is increasingly recognised that the current care models are not suitable for the needs of people with parkinsonism whose care needs evolve and change as the disease progresses. This trial aims to evaluate whether a complex and innovative model of integrated care will increase an individual's ability to achieve their personal goals, have a positive impact on health and symptom burden and be more cost-effective when compared with usual care., Methods: This is a single-centre, randomised controlled trial where people with parkinsonism and their informal caregivers are randomised into one of two groups: either PRIME Parkinson multi-component model of care or usual care. Adults ≥18 years with a diagnosis of parkinsonism, able to provide informed consent or the availability of a close friend or relative to act as a personal consultee if capacity to do so is absent and living in the trial geographical area are eligible. Up to three caregivers per patient can also take part, must be ≥18 years, provide informal, unpaid care and able to give informed consent. The primary outcome measure is goal attainment, as measured using the Bangor Goal Setting Interview. The duration of enrolment is 24 months. The total recruitment target is n=214, and the main analyses will be intention to treat., Discussion: This trial tests whether a novel model of care improves health and disease-related metrics including goal attainment and decreases hospitalisations whilst being more cost-effective than the current usual care. Subject to successful implementation of this intervention within one centre, the PRIME Parkinson model of care could then be evaluated within a cluster-randomised trial at multiple centres., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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182. Specialized Versus Generic Allied Health Therapy and the Risk of Parkinson's Disease Complications.
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Talebi AH, Ypinga JHL, De Vries NM, Nonnekes J, Munneke M, Bloem BR, Heskes T, Ben-Shlomo Y, and Darweesh SKL
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- Humans, Aged, Speech Therapy, Physical Therapy Modalities, Netherlands, Parkinson Disease complications
- Abstract
Background: Specialized versus generic physiotherapy (PT) reduces Parkinson's disease (PD)-related complications. It is unclear (1) whether other specialized allied heath disciplines, including occupational therapy (OT) and speech and language therapy (S<), also reduce complications; (2) whether there is a synergistic effect among multiple specialized disciplines; and (3) whether each allied health discipline prevents specific complications., Objectives: To longitudinally assessed whether the level of expertise (specialized vs. generic training) of PT, OT, and S< was associated with the incidence rate of PD-related complications., Methods: We used claims data of all insured persons with PD in the Netherlands between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2018. ParkinsonNet-trained therapists were classified as specialized, and other therapists as generic. We used mixed-effects Poisson regression models to estimate rate ratios adjusting for sociodemographic and clinical characteristics., Results: The population of 51,464 persons with PD (mean age, 72.4 years; standard deviation 9.8) sustained 10,525 PD-related complications during follow-up (median 3.3 years). Specialized PT was associated with fewer complications (incidence rate ratio [IRR] of specialized versus generic = 0.79; 95% confidence interval, [0.74-0.83]; P < 0.0001), as was specialized OT (IRR = 0.88 [0.77-0.99]; P = 0.03). We found a trend of an association between specialized S< and a lower rate of PD-related complications (IRR = 0.88 [0.74-1.04]; P = 0.18). The inverse association of specialized OT persisted in the stratum, which also received specialized PT (IRR = 0.62 [0.42-0.90]; P = 0.001). The strongest inverse association of PT was seen with orthopedic injuries (IRR = 0.78 [0.73-0.82]; P < 0.0001) and of S< with pneumonia (IRR = 0.70 [0.53-0.93]; P = 0.03)., Conclusions: These findings support a wider introduction of specialized allied health therapy expertise in PD care and conceivably for other medical conditions. © 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society., (© 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
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- 2023
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183. Time trends in demographic characteristics of participants and outcome measures in Parkinson's disease research: A 19-year single-center experience.
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Maas BR, Bloem BR, Ben-Shlomo Y, Evers LJW, Helmich RC, Kalf JG, van der Marck MA, Meinders MJ, Nieuwboer A, Nijkrake MJ, Nonnekes J, Post B, Sturkenboom IHWM, Verbeek MM, de Vries NM, van de Warrenburg B, van de Zande T, Munneke M, and Darweesh SKL
- Abstract
Background: Females, people with young-onset PD and older individuals, and non-white populations are historically underrepresented in clinical Parkinson's disease (PD) research. Furthermore, research traditionally focused predominantly on motor symptoms of PD. Including a representative and diverse group of people with PD and also studying non-motor symptoms is warranted to better understand heterogeneity in PD and to generalize research findings., Objective: This project aimed to determine whether, within a consecutive series of PD studies performed within a single center in the Netherlands: (1) the proportion of included females, mean age and proportion of native Dutch people changed over time; and 2) reports of the ethnicity of participants and the proportion of studies with non-motor outcomes changed over time., Methods: Characteristics of participants and non-motor outcomes were analyzed using a unique dataset of summary statistics of studies with a large number of participants conducted at a single center during a 19-year period (2003-2021)., Results: Results indicate no relationship between calendar time and proportion of females (mean 39 %), mean age (66 years), proportion of studies that reported ethnicity, and proportion of native Dutch people in studies (range 97-100 %). The proportion of participants in whom non-motor symptoms were assessed increased, but this difference was consistent with chance., Conclusion: Study participants in this center reflect the PD population in the Netherlands in terms of sex, but older individuals and non-native Dutch individuals are under-represented. We have still a lot to do in ensuring adequate representation and diversity in PD patients within our research., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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184. Density of Patient-Sharing Networks: Impact on the Value of Parkinson Care.
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Vlaanderen FP, de Man Y, Tanke MAC, Munneke M, Atsma F, Meinders MJ, Jeurissen PPT, Bloem BR, Krijthe JH, and Groenewoud S
- Subjects
- Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Health Care Costs, Hospitals, Netherlands, Parkinson Disease therapy
- Abstract
Background: Optimal care for Parkinson's disease (PD) requires coordination and collaboration between providers within a complex care network. Individual patients have personalised networks of their own providers, creating a unique informal network of providers who treat ('share') the same patient. These 'patient-sharing networks' differ in density, ie, the number of identical patients they share. Denser patient-sharing networks might reflect better care provision, since providers who share many patients might have made efforts to improve their mutual care delivery. We evaluated whether the density of these patient-sharing networks affects patient outcomes and costs., Methods: We analysed medical claims data from all PD patients in the Netherlands between 2012 and 2016. We focused on seven professional disciplines that are commonly involved in Parkinson care. We calculated for each patient the density score: the average number of patients that each patient's providers shared. Density scores could range from 1.00 (which might reflect poor collaboration) to 83.00 (which might reflect better collaboration). This score was also calculated at the hospital level by averaging the scores for all patients belonging to a specific hospital. Using logistic and linear regression analyses we estimated the relationship between density scores and health outcomes, healthcare utilization, and healthcare costs., Results: The average density score varied considerably (average 6.7, SD 8.2). Adjusted for confounders, higher density scores were associated with a lower risk of PD-related complications (odds ratio [OR]: 0.901; P <.001) and with lower healthcare costs (coefficients: -0.018, P =.005). Higher density scores were associated with more frequent involvement of neurologists (coefficient 0.068), physiotherapists (coefficient 0.052) and occupational therapists (coefficient 0.048) ( P values all <.001)., Conclusion: Patient sharing networks showed large variations in density, which appears unwanted as denser networks are associated with better outcomes and lower costs., (© 2022 The Author(s); Published by Kerman University of Medical Sciences This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.)
- Published
- 2022
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185. The Architecture of Contemporary Care Networks for Rare Movement Disorders: Leveraging the ParkinsonNet Experience.
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van de Warrenburg BP, Tiemessen M, Munneke M, and Bloem BR
- Abstract
In this paper, we present a universal model for implementing network care for persons living with chronic diseases, specifically those with rare movement disorders. Building on our longstanding experience with ParkinsonNet, an integrated care network for persons living with Parkinson's disease or a form of atypical parkinsonism, we provide a series of generic, supportive building blocks to (re)design comparable care networks. We discuss the specific challenges related to rare movement disorders and how these challenges can inform a tailored implementation strategy, using the basic building blocks to offer practical guidance. Lastly, we identify three main priorities to facilitate network development for these rare diseases. These include the clustering of different types of rare movement disorders at the network level, the implementation of supportive technology, and the development of interdisciplinary guidelines., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 van de Warrenburg, Tiemessen, Munneke and Bloem.)
- Published
- 2021
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186. Psychosocial needs of patients and spouses justify a position of psychosocial health professionals in the multidisciplinary care for Parkinson's disease.
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Duits A, van der Heijden C, van Het Hoofd M, Roodbol G, Tiemessen M, Munneke M, and Steppe M
- Abstract
Introduction: Living a life with Parkinson's Disease (PD) is a challenge for both patients and spouses. Patients have to cope with an increasing limitation in all domains of their daily life and spouses need to adjust to these changes. The focus of this study is on exploring, both quantitatively and qualitatively, the psychosocial needs of both patients with PD and spouses., Methods: An online survey with 11 themes, related to dealing with a chronic disease, was sent by an email to patients and spouses and two focus groups were planned, one with patients and one with spouses. Data from the survey were quantitatively analysed and audiotapes from the focus groups were transcribed verbatim and combined with notes., Results: Percentages of relevance are higher than 50% for all the themes, whereas those of the need for and received support are all lower than 50%. Focus groups revealed a negative image of psychosocial therapy and associations with failure, but also difficulties in signalling problems by professionals, little attention for spouses and limited access to specialized psychosocial care., Conclusion: Based on this exploration, there appears to be a threshold to ask for psychosocial support on the one hand and to find the right professional on the other hand. A permanent position for psychosocial health professionals in the multidisciplinary Parkinson teams and networks may close the gap between 'supply and demand'., (© 2020 The Authors.)
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- 2020
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187. [Deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease: better balanced through consideration of the psychosocial consequences].
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Duits AA, Munneke M, Aalderink CJ, Kuijf ML, Bloem BR, and Esselink RAJ
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- Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Period, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome, Adaptation, Psychological, Deep Brain Stimulation psychology, Parkinson Disease psychology, Parkinson Disease therapy
- Abstract
Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) is an effective intervention for Parkinson's disease if drug therapy with dopaminergic medication has become insufficient. Current post-operative care focuses on optimizing the neurostimulator in combination with medication. We believe that the success rate of DBS surgery can be enhanced if more attention is paid to the (psychosocial) adjustment problems of patients and their families. Finding a new balance after surgery, in the relationship, family and work, is not easy and can be complicated by postoperative non-motor changes. Care for psychosocial adjustment may improve the quality of life and as such increase the overall outcome after surgery. We present two cases to illustrate these psychosocial adjustment problems. One case describes the impact of stimulation-related behavioural changes on relationships, while the other case describes difficulties in resuming work despite successful surgery. Psychosocial support appeared helpful for both cases to find their new balance in life.
- Published
- 2019
188. Capturing patients' experiences to change Parkinson's disease care delivery: a multicenter study.
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van der Eijk M, Faber MJ, Post B, Okun MS, Schmidt P, Munneke M, and Bloem BR
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, North America, Delivery of Health Care standards, Parkinson Disease therapy, Patient-Centered Care standards, Psychometrics instrumentation, Quality of Health Care standards, Surveys and Questionnaires standards
- Abstract
Capturing patients' perspectives has become an essential part of a quality of care assessment. The patient centeredness questionnaire for PD (PCQ-PD) has been validated in The Netherlands as an instrument to measure patients' experiences. This study aims to assess the level of patient centeredness in North American Parkinson centers and to demonstrate the PCQ-PD's potential as a quality improvement instrument. 20 Parkinson Centers of Excellence participated in a multicenter study. Each center asked 50 consecutive patients to complete the questionnaire. Data analyses included calculating case mix-adjusted scores for overall patient centeredness (scoring range 0-3), six subscales (0-3), and quality improvement (0-9). Each center received a feedback report on their performance. The PCQ-PD was completed by 972 PD patients (median 50 per center, range 37-58). Significant differences between centers were found for all subscales, except for emotional support (p < 0.05). The information subscale (mean 1.62 SD 0.62) and collaboration subscale (mean 2.03 SD 0.58) received the lowest experience ratings. 14 centers (88 %) who returned the evaluation survey claimed that patient experience scores could help to improve the quality of care. Nine centers (56 %) utilized the feedback to change specific elements of their care delivery process. PD patients are under-informed about critical care issues and experience a lack of collaboration between healthcare professionals. Feedback on patients' experiences facilitated Parkinson centers to improve their delivery of care. These findings create a basis for collecting patients' experiences in a repetitive fashion, intertwined with existing quality of care registries.
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- 2015
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189. Revolutionising management of chronic disease: the ParkinsonNet approach.
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Bloem BR and Munneke M
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease therapy, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated methods, Evidence-Based Medicine methods, Humans, Medical Informatics, Netherlands, Patient Satisfaction, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Program Development, Regional Medical Programs organization & administration, Parkinson Disease therapy
- Published
- 2014
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190. Integrated multidisciplinary care in Parkinson's disease: a non-randomised, controlled trial (IMPACT).
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van der Marck MA, Munneke M, Mulleners W, Hoogerwaard EM, Borm GF, Overeem S, and Bloem BR
- Subjects
- Activities of Daily Living psychology, Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Quality of Life psychology, Rehabilitation methods, Surveys and Questionnaires, Treatment Outcome, Disease Management, Parkinson Disease rehabilitation, Rehabilitation standards
- Abstract
Background: A multidisciplinary approach is thought to be the best way to manage the motor and non-motor symptoms of Parkinson's disease, but how such care should be delivered is unknown. To address this gap in knowledge, we assessed the effectiveness of an integrated multidisciplinary approach compared with usual care., Methods: We recruited patients for our non-randomised controlled trial from six community hospitals in the Netherlands (two in regions where the integrated care intervention was available and four in control regions that administered usual care). Eligible patients were those with Parkinson's disease, aged 20-80 years, and without severe cognitive impairment or comorbidity. Patients in the intervention group were offered an individually tailored comprehensive assessment in an expert tertiary referral centre and subsequent referrals to a regional network of allied health professionals specialised in Parkinson's disease. Primary outcomes were activities of daily living (Academic Medical Center linear disability score [ALDS]) and quality of life (Parkinson's disease quality of life questionnaire [PDQL]) measured at 4, 6, and 8 months. Secondary outcomes included motor functioning (unified Parkinson's disease rating scale, part III [UPDRS III], at 4 months), caregiver burden (belastungsfragebogen Parkinson angehörigen-kurzversion [BELA-A-k] at 4 and 8 months), and costs (during whole study period). Primary analysis was by intention to treat and included scores over 4, 6, and 8 months, with correction for baseline score. The trial is registered at Clinicaltrials.gov, number NCT00518791., Findings: We recruited 301 patients (150 patients in the intervention group and 151 in the control group) between August, 2007, and December, 2009, of whom 285 completed follow-up (last follow-up was July, 2010). 101 (67%) patients in the intervention group visited the expert centre; 49 (33%) opted not to visit the expert centre. The average ALDS score from months 4, 6, and 8, with correction for baseline score, was greater in the intervention group than in the control group (difference 1·3 points, 95% CI -2·1 to 2·8; corresponding raw logit score difference 0·1, 95% CI 0·003 to 0·2) as was the average PDQL score (difference 3·0 points, 0·4 to 5·6). Secondary analysis with correction for baseline disease severity showed no differences between groups for ALDS (difference 0·9 points, 95% CI -0·6 to 2·4; corresponding raw logit score difference 0·1, -0·02 to 0·3) or PDQL (difference 1·7 points, -1·2 to 4·6). Secondary outcomes did not differ between groups (UPDRS III score difference 0·6 points, 95% CI -1·4 to 2·6; BELA-A-k score difference 0·8 points, -0·2 to 1·8; cost difference €742, -€489 to €1950)., Interpretation: This integrated care approach offered only small benefits to patients with Parkinson's disease, and these disappeared after correction for baseline disease severity. These results suggest that different approaches are needed to achieve more substantial health benefits., Funding: NutsOhra Foundation, Stichting Parkinson Nederland, National Parkinson Foundation., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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191. Using online health communities to deliver patient-centered care to people with chronic conditions.
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van der Eijk M, Faber MJ, Aarts JW, Kremer JA, Munneke M, and Bloem BR
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Humans, Parkinson Disease psychology, Quality of Health Care, Self Care, Internet, Parkinson Disease therapy, Patient-Centered Care
- Abstract
Background: Our health care system faces major threats as the number of people with multiple chronic conditions rises dramatically., Objective: To study the use of Online Health Communities (OHCs) as a tool to facilitate high-quality and affordable health care for future generations., Methods: OHCs are Internet-based platforms that unite either a group of patients, a group of professionals, or a mixture of both. Members interact using modern communication technologies such as blogs, chats, forums, and wikis. We illustrate the use of OHCs for ParkinsonNet, a professional network for Parkinson disease whose participants-both patients and professionals-use various types of OHCs to deliver patient-centered care., Results: We discuss several potential applications in clinical practice. First, due to rapid advances in medical knowledge, many health professionals lack sufficient expertise to address the complex health care needs of chronic patients. OHCs can be used to share experiences, exchange knowledge, and increase disease-specific expertise. Second, current health care delivery is fragmented, as many patients acquire relationships with multiple professionals and institutions. OHCs can bridge geographical distances and enable interdisciplinary collaboration across institutions and traditional echelons. Third, chronic patients lack adequate tools to self-manage their disease. OHCs can be used to actively engage and empower patients in their health care process and to tailor care to their individual needs. Personal health communities of individual patients offer unique opportunities to store all medical information in one central place, while allowing transparent communication across all members of each patient's health care team., Conclusions: OHCs are a powerful tool to address some of the challenges chronic care faces today. OHCs help to facilitate communication among professionals and patients and support coordination of care across traditional echelons, which does not happen spontaneously in busy practice.
- Published
- 2013
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192. Physical inactivity in Parkinson's disease.
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van Nimwegen M, Speelman AD, Hofman-van Rossum EJ, Overeem S, Deeg DJ, Borm GF, van der Horst MH, Bloem BR, and Munneke M
- Subjects
- Aged, Cohort Studies, Comorbidity, Disability Evaluation, Female, Humans, Male, Parkinson Disease epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Activities of Daily Living, Motor Activity, Parkinson Disease complications
- Abstract
Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) are likely to become physically inactive, because of their motor, mental, and emotional symptoms. However, specific studies on physical activity in PD are scarce, and results are conflicting. Here, we quantified daily physical activities in a large cohort of PD patients and another large cohort of matched controls. Moreover, we investigated the influence of disease-related factors on daily physical activities in PD patients. Daily physical activity data of PD patients (n = 699) were collected in the ParkinsonNet trial and of controls (n = 1,959) in the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA); data were determined using the LAPAQ, a validated physical activity questionnaire. In addition, variables that may affect daily physical activities in PD were recorded, including motor symptoms, depression, disability in daily life, and comorbidity. Patients were physically less active; a reduction of 29% compared to controls (95% CI, 10-44%). Multivariate regression analyses demonstrated that greater disease severity, gait impairment, and greater disability in daily living were associated with less daily physical activity in PD (R (2) = 24%). In this large study, we show that PD patients are about one-third less active compared to controls. While disease severity, gait, and disability in daily living predicted part of the inactivity, a portion of the variance remained unexplained, suggesting that additional determinants may also affect daily physical activities in PD. Because physical inactivity has many adverse consequences, work is needed to develop safe and enjoyable exercise programs for patients with PD.
- Published
- 2011
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193. Reproducibility and validity of patient-rated assessment of speech, swallowing, and saliva control in Parkinson's disease.
- Author
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Kalf JG, Borm GF, de Swart BJ, Bloem BR, Zwarts MJ, and Munneke M
- Subjects
- Aged, Deglutition Disorders etiology, Dysarthria etiology, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parkinson Disease complications, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Self Report, Sialorrhea etiology, Deglutition Disorders psychology, Dysarthria psychology, Parkinson Disease psychology, Severity of Illness Index, Sialorrhea psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Objective: To report on the development and psychometric evaluation of the Radboud Oral Motor Inventory for Parkinson's Disease (ROMP), a newly developed patient-rated assessment of speech, swallowing, and saliva control in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD)., Design: Reliability and validity study., Setting: Tertiary-care Parkinson center for multidisciplinary assessment., Participants: Consecutive community-dwelling patients with PD (n=129) or atypical parkinsonism (AP; n=49; mean ± SD age, 64±9.8y; mean ± SD disease duration, 7y; median Hoehn and Yahr [HY] stage, 2.5)., Interventions: Not applicable., Main Outcome Measures: To evaluate reproducibility, 60 patients completed the ROMP twice within a mean of 24±12 days. To study validity, another cohort of 118 patients who had completed the ROMP was assessed by both a neurologist (HY stage, Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale III) and speech-language pathologist (severity of dysarthria, dysphagia, drooling) who were blinded to ROMP scores., Results: Confirmatory factor analysis identified the 3 a priori-designed ROMP domains of speech, swallowing, and saliva control. Internal consistency was .95 for the total ROMP and .87 to .94 for the 3 domains or subscales. Intraclass correlation coefficients for reproducibility were .94 and .83 to .92 for the subscales. Construct validity was substantial to good with correlations ranging from .36 to .82. The ROMP differentiated significantly (P<.001) between patients indicated for speech therapy (based on independent assessment) and those who were not and between mild, moderate, and severe PD according to HY stage., Conclusions: The ROMP provides a reliable and valid instrument to evaluate patient-perceived problems with speech, swallowing, and saliva control in patients with PD or AP., (Copyright © 2011 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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194. Efficacy of community-based physiotherapy networks for patients with Parkinson's disease: a cluster-randomised trial.
- Author
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Munneke M, Nijkrake MJ, Keus SH, Kwakkel G, Berendse HW, Roos RA, Borm GF, Adang EM, Overeem S, and Bloem BR
- Subjects
- Aged, Algorithms, Disability Evaluation, Evidence-Based Medicine, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Netherlands, Physical Therapy Modalities, Physical Therapy Specialty economics, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Quality of Life, Recovery of Function, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Parkinson Disease therapy, Physical Therapy Specialty methods
- Abstract
Background: Many patients with Parkinson's disease are treated with physiotherapy. We have developed a community-based professional network (ParkinsonNet) that involves training of a selected number of expert physiotherapists to work according to evidence-based recommendations, and structured referrals to these trained physiotherapists to increase the numbers of patients they treat. We aimed to assess the efficacy of this approach for improving health-care outcomes., Methods: Between February, 2005, and August, 2007, we did a cluster-randomised trial with 16 clusters (defined as community hospitals and their catchment area). Clusters were randomly allocated by use of a variance minimisation algorithm to ParkinsonNet care (n=8) or usual care (n=8). Patients were assessed at baseline and at 8, 16, and 24 weeks of follow-up. The primary outcome was a patient preference disability score, the patient-specific index score, at 16 weeks. Health secondary outcomes were functional mobility, mobility-related quality of life, and total societal costs over 24 weeks. Analysis was by intention to treat. This trial is registered, number NCT00330694., Findings: We included 699 patients. Baseline characteristics of the patients were comparable between the ParkinsonNet clusters (n=358) and usual-care clusters (n=341). The primary endpoint was similar for patients within the ParkinsonNet clusters (mean 47.7, SD 21.9) and control clusters (48.3, 22.4). Health secondary endpoints were also similar for patients in both study groups. Total costs over 24 weeks were lower in ParkinsonNet clusters compared with usual-care clusters (difference euro727; 95% CI 56-1399)., Interpretation: Implementation of ParkinsonNet networks did not change health outcomes for patients living in ParkinsonNet clusters. However, health-care costs were reduced in ParkinsonNet clusters compared with usual-care clusters., Funding: ZonMw; Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research; Dutch Parkinson's Disease Society; National Parkinson Foundation; Stichting Robuust., (Copyright 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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195. Long-term follow-up of a high-intensity exercise program in patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
- Author
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de Jong Z, Munneke M, Kroon HM, van Schaardenburg D, Dijkmans BA, Hazes JM, and Vliet Vlieland TP
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Disease Progression, Exercise Tolerance physiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Muscle Strength physiology, Patient Compliance, Treatment Outcome, Arthritis, Rheumatoid physiopathology, Arthritis, Rheumatoid therapy, Exercise Therapy methods
- Abstract
The aims of this study were to describe rheumatoid arthritis patients' compliance with continued exercise after participation in a 2-year supervised high-intensity exercise program and to investigate if the initially achieved effectiveness and safety were sustained. Data were gathered by follow-up of the participants who completed the 2-year high-intensity intervention in a randomized controlled trial (Rheumatoid Arthritis Patient In Training study). Eighteen months thereafter, measurements of compliance, aerobic capacity, muscle strength, functional ability, disease activity, and radiological damage of the large joints were performed. Seventy-one patients were available for follow-up at 18 months, of whom 60 (84%) were still exercising (exercise group: EG), with average similar intensity but at a lower frequency as the initial intervention. Eleven patients (16%) reported low intensity or no exercises (no-exercise group: no-EG). Patients in the EG had better aerobic fitness and functional ability, lower disease activity, and higher attendance rate after the initial 2-year intervention. At follow-up, both groups showed a deterioration of aerobic fitness and only patients in the EG were able to behold their muscle strength gains. Functional ability, gained during the previous participation in high-intensity exercises, remained stable in both groups. Importantly, no detrimental effects on disease activity or radiological damage of the large joints were found in either group. In conclusion, the majority of the patients who participated in the 24-month high-intensity exercise program continued exercising in the ensuing 18 months. In contrast to those who did not continue exercising, they were able to preserve their gains in muscle strength without increased disease activity or progression of radiological damage.
- Published
- 2009
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196. Clinimetric properties of instruments to assess activities in patients with hand injury: a systematic review of the literature.
- Author
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van de Ven-Stevens LA, Munneke M, Terwee CB, Spauwen PH, and van der Linde H
- Subjects
- Humans, Injury Severity Score, Psychomotor Performance, Activities of Daily Living, Diagnostic Equipment, Hand Injuries classification, Hand Injuries diagnosis, Hand Injuries physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: To perform a systematic review of the literature to assess the clinimetric properties of instruments measuring limitations of activity., Data Sources: The Medline, Cochrane Library, Picarta, Occupational Therapy-seeker, and CINAHL databases were searched for English or Dutch language articles published between 2001 and 2006., Study Selection: Two reviewers independently reviewed the identified publications for eligibility (based on the title and abstract), methodologic criteria, and clinimetric properties. To evaluate the available information of the clinimetric properties, the quality criteria for instrument properties were used., Data Extraction: All the clinimetric properties of the 23 instruments were described based on the publications that were included., Data Synthesis: In total, 103 publications were retrieved, 79 of which were eligible for inclusion. Of these, 54 met the methodologic quality criteria. Twenty-three instruments were reviewed, divided into (1) pegboard tests measuring fine hand use only; (2) instruments measuring fine hand use only, by picking up, manipulating, and placing different objects; (3) instruments measuring single tasks (and fine hand use) by scoring task performance; and (4) questionnaires. The reliability, validity, and responsiveness of only 5 instruments were adequately described in the literature; the description of the clinimetric properties of the other instruments was inadequate., Conclusions: None of the instruments had a positive rating for all the clinimetric properties.
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- 2009
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197. Gait velocity and the Timed-Up-and-Go test were sensitive to changes in mobility in frail elderly patients.
- Author
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van Iersel MB, Munneke M, Esselink RA, Benraad CE, and Olde Rikkert MG
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging physiology, Exercise Test methods, Female, Humans, Male, Patient Selection, Prospective Studies, Video Recording, Frail Elderly, Gait physiology, Geriatric Assessment methods, Mobility Limitation
- Abstract
Objective: To estimate clinically relevant changes in functional mobility tests and quantitative gait measures at group and individual level in frail elderly patients., Study Design and Setting: This study was a cohort study of consecutively admitted frail elderly patients. Gait velocity, Timed-Up-and-Go test (TUG), and other mobility tests were measured on admission and 2 weeks later. In between, patients received multidisciplinary treatment. Three experts decided from video recordings if patients had a clinically relevant change in gait, defined as change in the expected risk of falling., Results: A total of 85 patients (mean age 75.8 years, 46 female) participated. Of whom, 45% had dementia; 59 patients were stable and 26 showed a clinically relevant change in gait. Gait velocity and TUG were most sensitive to change at group level. In individual patients, a 5% change from baseline in gait velocity and 9% change in TUG had a sensitivity of 92% and 93% for detection of clinically relevant change, but specificity of 27% and 34%, respectively., Conclusion: At group level, gait velocity and TUG were, from all investigated tests, most sensitive to change and in this perspective the best outcome variables. In individual patients, the high intraindividual variability makes these measures unsuitable as independent screening instruments for clinically relevant changes in gait.
- Published
- 2008
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198. Measuring the cortical silent period can increase diagnostic confidence for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
- Author
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Schelhaas HJ, Arts IM, Overeem S, Houtman CJ, Janssen H, Kleine BU, Munneke M, and Zwarts MJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sex Factors, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis diagnosis, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Evoked Potentials
- Abstract
We evaluated a modified measurement of the cortical silent period (CSP) as a simple procedure to add further confidence in the diagnostic work-up for ALS. Thirty-seven consecutive patients with a suspicion of having ALS were included together with 25 healthy volunteers, and followed until a final diagnosis (ALS versus 'ALS mimic') was reached. Using a CSP cut-off value of 200 ms for males and 150 ms for females, the following test characteristics were obtained for ALS versus ALS mimics together with controls: sensitivity for excluding ALS 0.83, specificity 0.56 (males) and sensitivity 0.81, specificity 0.82 (females). A CSP longer than the mentioned cut-off values should alarm the clinician for the presence of a disorder other than ALS.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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