Back to Search Start Over

Optimal Emergency Department Care Practices for Persons Living With Dementia: A Scoping Review

Authors :
Scott M. Dresden
Zachary Taylor
Peter Serina
Maura Kennedy
Annie B. Wescott
Teresita Hogan
Manish N. Shah
Ula Hwang
Neelum T. Aggarawal
Heather Allore
Amy Aloysi
Michael Belleville
Fernanda M. Bellolio
Marian (Emmy) Betz
Kevin Biese
Cynthia Brandt
Stacey Bruursema
Ryan Carnahan
Christopher Carpenter
David Carr
Jennie Chin-Hansen
Morgan Daven
Nida Degesys
Jeffrey Dussetschleger
Michael Ellenbogen
Jason Falvey
Beverley Foster
Cameron Gettel
Angela Gifford
Andrea Gilmore-Bykovskyi
Elizabeth Goldberg
Jin Han
James Hardy
Susan N. Hastings
Jon M. Hirshon
Ly Hoang
William Hung
Eric Isaacs
Naveena Jaspal
Deb Jobe
Jerry Johnson
Kathleen (Kathy) Kelly
Amy Kind
Jesseca Leggett
Michael Malone
Michelle Moccia
Monica Moreno
Nancy Morrow-Howell
Armin Nowroozpoor
Ugochi Ohuabunwa
Brenda Oiyemhonian
William Perry
Beth Prusaczyk
Jason Resendez
Kristin Rising
Mary Sano
Bob Savage
Manish Shah
Joe Suyama
Jeremy Swartzberg
Vaishal Tolia
Allan Vann
Teresa Webb
Sandra Weintraub
Source :
Journal of the American Medical Directors Association. 23:1314.e1-1314.e29
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

To summarize research on optimal emergency department (ED) care practices for persons living with dementia (PLWDs) and develop research priorities.Systematic scoping review.PLWDs in the ED.The following Patient-Intervention-Comparison-Outcome (PICO) questions were developed: PICO 1, What components of emergency department care improve patient-centered outcomes for persons with dementia? PICO 2, How do emergency care needs for persons with dementia differ from other patients in the emergency department? A scoping review was conducted following PRISMA-ScR guidelines and presented to the Geriatric Emergency care Applied Research 2.0 Advancing Dementia Care network to inform research priorities.From the 6348 publications identified, 23 were abstracted for PICO 1 and 26 were abstracted for PICO 2. Emergency care considerations for PLWDs included functional dependence, behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia, and identification of and management of pain. Concerns regarding ED care processes, the ED environment, and meeting a PWLD's basic needs were described. A comprehensive geriatric assessment and dedicated ED unit, a home hospital program, and a low-stimulation bed shade and contact-free monitor all showed improvement in patient-centered or health care use outcomes. However, all were single-site studies evaluating different outcomes. These results informed the following research priorities: (1) training and dementia care competencies; (2) patient-centric and care partner-centric evaluation interventions; (3) the impact of community- and identity-based factors on ED care for PLWDs; (4) economic or other implementation science measures to address viability; and (5) environmental, operational, personnel, system, or policy changes to improve ED care for PLWDs.A wide range of components of both ED care practices and ED care needs for PLWDs have been studied. Although many interventions show positive results, the lack of depth and reproducible results prevent specific recommendations on best practices in ED care for PLWDs.

Details

ISSN :
15258610
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....529ccd1f57affd2631f2152e6099741b