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A Prospective Longitudinal Study of Caregivers of Community Dwelling Persons with Severe Dementia (PISCES): Study Protocol.

Authors :
Malhotra C
Vishwanath P
Yong JR
Østbye T
Seow D
Yap P
Tan LL
Tham WY
Vaingankar J
Foo J
Tan BY
Tong K
Ng WC
Allen JC Jr
Malhotra R
Tan WM
Wee SL
Ng LL
Goveas R
Mok V
Sim A
Ng WF
Wong HK
Balasundaram B
Tan RQ
Ong PS
Cheong CY
Yee Chung Pheng A
Tiong C
Hum A
Lee A
Finkelstein EA
Source :
Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD [J Alzheimers Dis] 2020; Vol. 75 (2), pp. 403-416.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Although many persons with severe dementia (PWSDs) are cared for at home by their family caregivers, few studies have assessed end of life (EOL) care experiences of PWSDs. We present the protocol for the PISCES study (Panel study Investigating Status of Cognitively impaired Elderly in Singapore) which aims to describe the clinical course, health care utilization, and expenditures for community-dwelling PWSDs; and perceived burden, coping, resilience, anticipatory and prolonged grief among their caregivers. This ongoing multi-center prospective longitudinal study is recruiting primary informal caregivers of 250 PWSDs from major restructured public hospitals, community hospitals, home care foundations, and hospices in Singapore. Caregivers are surveyed every four months for two years or until the PWSD passes away and then at eight weeks and six months post-death to assess the bereavement of the caregiver. Survey questionnaires included validated tools to assess PWSDs' quality of life, suffering, behaviors, functional status, resource utilization; and caregiver's satisfaction with care, awareness of prognosis, care preferences, resilience, coping, perceived burden, distress, positive aspects of caregiving, anticipatory grief, and bereavement adjustment. We also conduct qualitative in-depth interviews with a sub-sample of caregivers. The survey data is being linked with medical and billing records of PWSDs. The study has been approved by an ethics board. Results from the study will be disseminated through publications and presentations targeting researchers, policy makers and clinicians interested in understanding and improving EOL care for PWSDs and their caregivers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1875-8908
Volume :
75
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32280086
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-190897