the AAFP National Research Network, Leawood, KS; the Department of Sociology, University of Missouri, Kansas City; the Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH; the Department of Family Medicine, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora; and the Department of Medical Education and Research, Danbury Hospital, Danbury, CT.
J Am Board Fam Med. 2014 Mar-Apr;27(2):275-83. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2014.02.120284.
Given the increasing age of the US population, understanding how primary care is delivered surrounding dementia and physicians' perceived barriers and needs associated with this care is essential.
A 29-item questionnaire was developed by project investigators and family physician consultants and mailed to a random sample of 1500 US members of the American Academy of Family Physicians in 2008; 2 follow-up mailings were sent to nonrespondents. Physicians were queried about sociodemographic characteristics, practice patterns, and beliefs (including challenges, barriers, and needs) about care processes focusing on dementia among older patients.
The response rate was 60%, with respondents statistically comparable (P > .05) to the American Academy of Family Physicians physician population. Among physicians, 93% screen and/or conduct diagnostic evaluations for dementia in older patients, whereas 91% provide ongoing primary care for patients with dementia whether or not they screen for or diagnose dementia. Forty percent of physicians refer some patients with suspected dementia to other providers (primarily neurologists) to verify diagnosis, for comanagement, or both. Factors affecting the diagnosis of dementia and the delivery of dementia care included patient behavior challenges (aggressiveness, restlessness, paranoia, wandering); comorbidities (falls, delirium, adverse medication reactions, urinary incontinence); caregiver challenges (fatigue, planning for patient's institutional placement, anger); and structural barriers (clinician time, time required for screening, limited treatment options). Tools needed to provide enhanced dementia care included better assessment tools, community resources, and diagnostic and screening tools.
Family physicians are highly involved in the assessment and routine care of patients with suspected dementia or diagnosed with dementia, although a relative few are not. This is despite the recognized challenges physicians encounter in the assessment and care processes.
鉴于美国人口老龄化的加剧,了解初级保健在痴呆症周围的提供方式以及医生对这种护理的感知障碍和需求至关重要。
2008 年,项目研究人员和家庭医生顾问制定了一份包含 29 个问题的问卷,并邮寄给美国家庭医师学会的 1500 名随机样本成员;向未回复的人发送了 2 封后续邮件。医生们被问及有关老年患者痴呆症护理过程的社会人口统计学特征、实践模式和信念(包括挑战、障碍和需求)。
回复率为 60%,回复者在统计学上与美国家庭医师学会的医生群体相当(P>.05)。在医生中,93%对老年患者进行痴呆症筛查和/或进行诊断评估,而 91%为痴呆症患者提供持续的初级保健,无论他们是否对痴呆症进行筛查或诊断。40%的医生将一些疑似痴呆症的患者转诊给其他提供者(主要是神经科医生)以确认诊断、共同管理或两者兼而有之。影响痴呆症诊断和痴呆症护理提供的因素包括患者行为挑战(攻击性、不安、偏执、徘徊);共病(跌倒、谵妄、药物不良反应、尿失禁);照顾者挑战(疲劳、计划患者的机构安置、愤怒);和结构性障碍(临床医生时间、筛查所需时间、有限的治疗选择)。提供强化痴呆症护理所需的工具包括更好的评估工具、社区资源以及诊断和筛查工具。
家庭医生高度参与疑似痴呆症或确诊痴呆症患者的评估和常规护理,尽管相对较少的医生不参与。尽管医生在评估和护理过程中遇到了公认的挑战,但情况仍然如此。