Sunday, 30 December 2012
dementia by type'
Friday, 18 May 2012
dementia patient 'had 106 carers'
Aberdeen dementia patient 'had 106 carers'
By Eleanor BradfordBBC Scotland Health CorrespondentThursday, 9 June 2011
'Chemical cosh' dementia drug prescriptions concern
'Chemical cosh' dementia drug prescriptions concern
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More than 50 health and social care organisations are calling for fresh action to cut the prescription of "chemical cosh" drugs.
Around 180,000 people with dementia are thought to be prescribed antipsychotic drugs in the UK.
But 80% of those prescriptions are said by critics to be inappropriate.
Long-term use of the drugs can make dementia symptoms worse, reduce the ability to talk and walk and increase the risk of stroke and even death.
The Dementia Action Alliance - which includes the Alzheimer's Society, Age UK and the Department of Health - want all prescriptions for antipsychotics to be reviewed by the end of March 2012.
To help patients and carers, the Alliance has published a booklet giving information and advice about how to make sure antipsychotics are not prescribed inappropriately.
Powerful sedativeAntipsychotics have a powerful sedative effect and are often used when dementia patients become aggressive, agitated or distressed.
“Start Quote
End Quote Paul Burstow MP Care Services MinisterIt is unacceptable that 1,800 people with dementia die prematurely every year as a result of antipsychotic medication”
They are most commonly given to dementia sufferers in care homes and hospitals.
Guidelines say they should only be used as a last resort and over a short period of time, but the evidence suggests that in some cases they are being prescribed for years.
A study published in January 2009 showed the medication nearly doubled the risk of death for many dementia patients when taken over a prolonged period.
Chemical coshJeremy Hughes, Chief Executive of the Alzheimer's Society, said it was unacceptable that people with dementia were having their health and quality of life put at risk because of antipsychotics:
"It is essential we bring an end to this chemical cosh and empower people with dementia and carers with the information they need to ensure they are not prescribed these drugs inappropriately. This call to action can do just that.
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"It's not just about reducing antipsychotics but also about improving quality care. This means developing alternative treatments and finding better ways to manage pain and other medical conditions."
Following an independent report for the government in November 2009 that found the drugs killed around 1,800 patients a year, ministers announced plans to cut prescribing rates by two-thirds within three years.
But new figures from the NHS Information Centre suggest prescription may have dropped by less than 20% over the past two years.
When in opposition, Paul Burstow, now Care Services Minister, campaigned to cut the use of the 'chemical cosh'.
"It is unacceptable that 1,800 people with dementia die prematurely every year as a result of antipsychotic medication. That is why I'm backing this campaign," he said.
"Reducing the use of antipsychotic medication is one of the Coalition Government's four key priorities for dementia. With the right support, people can live well with dementia and continue to do the things they enjoy for years after diagnosis."
Alternative therapiesThe campaign is also being supported by Dr Clare Gerada, Chair of Royal College of General Practitioners.
"Dealing with very agitated or aggressive patients can be distressing, and it can be difficult knowing what to do for the best of the patient, but antipsychotics should in most cases only be used as a last resort, and for the short term.
"Antipsychotics have potential to do real harm to patients, including an increased risk of stroke. There are viable alternatives - including behavioural therapies - that we should encourage wherever possible to ensure the care our patients receive is appropriate, in their best interests and does not cause them harm."
Rebecca Wood, Chief Executive of Alzheimer's Research UK, the UK's leading dementia research charity, said:
"Action to reduce the prescription of these drugs and develop alternative treatments has lacked urgency.
"This campaign should renew that urgency and drive home the need to invest in more research so that safer, more effective treatments can be found."
Martin Green of the English Community Care Association, a body that represents care homes, said: "ECCA really welcomes the commitment by the Department of Health to reduce anti-psychotic prescribing and we want to see all sections of the system - primary care, acute hospitals, pharmacists and care homes - working in partnership to reduce inappropriate anti-psychotic prescribing".
Saturday, 4 December 2010
Dementia nursing care needs overhaul, says King's Fund
Dementia nursing care needs overhaul, says King's Fund
Nursing care for people with dementia is in need of a radical overhaul, a leading think tank has warned.
The King's Fund says people with Alzheimer's and dementia in England are having NHS-funded care withdrawn in the later stages of their illness.
It says relatives have to pick up the bill for additional nursing support.
The government says the number of people receiving continuing care has risen by almost two-thirds in the past three years.
There are 820,000 people living with dementia in the UK and that number is set to rise as the population ages, according to the Alzheimer's Research Trust.
Social needsChristophe Grillet, from Cambridge, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease 17 years ago, was receiving round-the-clock health care from the NHS at home but as his condition became more advanced, he was reassessed and the continuous care was withdrawn.
“Start Quote
End Quote Kate GrilletBecause we didn't get the support we needed, we are separated, and that is the biggest problem”
His wife Kate said: "They say his needs are primarily social care needs - washing, dressing, feeding and that he's relatively easy to deal with.
"The country is full of people, including my husband, who are having their support taken away and left to try and fund whatever care they can get themselves.
"This doesn't take into account when you have Alzheimer's your health needs are even more, you don't get better."
Mrs Grillet said she felt excluded from much of the decision-making regarding his NHS-funded care and now her husband is in a home which costs them £600 a week.
"Because we didn't get the support we needed, we are separated, and that is the biggest problem," she added.
The government has issued guidelines to primary care trusts (PCTs) on how they should assess the continuing care needs of people with dementia but campaigners say funding cuts mean many PCTs just ignore them.
Barbara Pointon, from Dementia UK and the Alzheimer's Society, said: "What's happening with NHS continuing health care is it's getting more and more difficult to get in the first place, and when people with dementia move into the advanced stage and need more care, it's being taken away from them."
“Start Quote
End Quote Jo Webber NHS FederationOver the next 30 years the number of people with dementia will double so we do have to find different ways of delivering services”
The King's Fund is calling for a shake-up of the system that differentiates between health care, which the NHS pays for, and social care, which local authorities and individuals have to fund.
Richard Humphries, from the health think tank, said: "The system is increasingly broken and it will struggle to cope with the rising tide of people with dementia and people will become more dissatisfied with it.
"We desperately need a radical overall to bring more fairness and more funding into the system."
Jo Webber, from the NHS Confederation, which represents the majority of NHS organisations, said the service did not have an "infinite pot of money".
"Over the next 30 years the number of people with dementia will double, so we do have to find different ways of delivering services," she said.
"I don't underestimate the anxiety and the worry at the moment for people who are having these issues but we can't go on this way."
Mr Grillet's PCT says it followed the government's guidelines but health care needs change.
Related stories
- Q&A: Dementia 03 FEBRUARY 2010, HEALTH
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Wednesday, 3 November 2010
Doctors told to cut anti-psychotic drugs for dementia
Doctors told to cut anti-psychotic drugs for dementia
The use of anti-psychotic drugs for dementia patients must be cut by two-thirds by November 2011, the minister responsible has warned doctors.
Click to play
Care Services Minister Paul Burstow told Panorama that GPs must "take responsibility" and drastically reduce the amount of drugs being prescribed.
Evidence suggests the drugs - used to control aggressive behaviour - have dangerous side effects.
A leading GP said most doctors agree that their use needs to be curtailed.
Mr Burstow said the evidence for cutting their use is compelling: "It kills people. It cuts their lives short. It reduces the quality of their lives. It is now time for those responsible for prescribing to take responsibility and cut the prescribing, and make sure we improve the quality of life for people with dementia."
'Chemical cosh'A study commissioned for the government reported in 2009 that anti-psychotics are being prescribed to 180,000 patients and their side effects, including increased risk of stroke, mean that the deaths of 1,800 people a year are attributable to their use.
Mr Burstow, the Liberal Democrat minister, campaigned in opposition on behalf of dementia patients and their families to reduce the reliance on the drugs both for patients being cared for at home and those in care facilities.
“Start Quote
End Quote Glynne Thompson Wife of dementia suffererHe was virtually comatose is the only way to explain it”
Most of the drugs were developed in the 1950s for the treatment of psychosis and are not licensed for long term use with dementia.
They are prescribed "off label" for dementia patients because of their strong sedative effects and doctors have turned to them to deal with the behavioural symptoms of dementia patients.
They are supposed to be used as a last resort and only prescribed for short periods and one at a time.
Professor Tim Kendall, who wrote the current guidelines on when and how anti-psychotics should be used, is critical of how much they are being relied upon.
"By far and away the most common use is to control people's behaviours. It's nothing more than a chemical cosh," he said.
The government currently spends more than £80m on anti-psychotic drugs for dementia patients a year - and spends £8.2bn overall in the treatment of dementia.
"I don't think we're spending that £8.2 billion at all well. If we were spending it well we wouldn't have this unacceptable level of prescribing anti-psychotics in the system," Mr Burstow said.
'Virtually comatose'Professor Steve Field, chairman of the Royal College of General Practitioners, said reliance on the drugs is part of a wider problem in the system and most GPs agree that their use needs to be reduced.
"This isn't just about prescribing, this is about the whole system. It needs to change the system is a disgrace as it is at the moment and we all need to do better."
Glynne Thompson has been attempted to wean her husband Ken, who she cares for at home, off the anti-psychotics that he was prescribed in order to control his behaviour as his dementia worsened.
"He was virtually comatose is the only way to explain it - constantly dribbling, it was like being confronted with a baby that couldn't do anything for themselves," Mrs Thompson said of the side effects of the drugs.
Panorama: What Have the Drugs Done to Dad, BBC One, Monday, 1 November at 2030GMT and then available in the UK on the BBC iPlayer.
Related stories
- Dementia drug use 'killing many' 12 NOVEMBER 2009, HEALTH
- Please Look After Dad 02 DECEMBER 2007, PANORAMA
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Friday, 5 February 2010
key to beating dementia
Indian village may hold key
Ballabgarh in northern India has unusually low levels of Alzheimer's disease. More than 820,000 people in the UK are living with dementia, a number that is expected to double by 2051. Is there anything that can be learnt from this region to slow the trend?
Enjoying a chat, the elders are still on the ball |
These men are in their sixties and seventies, while their faces bear the evidence of years of hard work in the fields, their minds are still sharp.
In other parts of the world, people of their age would be at some risk of developing dementia. But here, Alzheimer's disease is rare. In fact, scientists believe recorded rates of the condition in this small community are lower than anywhere else in the world.
76-year-old Parshadi Lal says: "I feel good, I feel healthy, I have a walk every morning, even though my knees do now give me a bit of trouble." His friends nod in agreement.
Record low rates
Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh spent several years studying over-55s in this area.
They wanted to be sure they did not miss any cases of the condition.
It is an area where people do not tend to live as long as they do in wealthier, more developed areas, so you would expect rates of Alzheimer's disease to be lower.
But even after the scientists factored in the lower life expectancy of people in this area, the rate of Alzheimer's disease was significantly below those in the UK - and less than a third of those in parts of the US.
"We had a hunch that rates here would be lower," says Dr Vijay Chandra, one of the study authors. In fact, they found what appeared to be among the lowest rates of the condition ever recorded by scientists.
So what is it about the people of Ballabgarh that is protecting them from a condition that affects about 36 million people worldwide?
Gene search
Dr Chandra told me they tested people to see whether fewer of them carried the APO4E gene, which predisposes people to Alzheimer's disease. They did not.
A farming community means everyone is physically active |
But in contrast with lives in Pennsylvania and other parts of the world, the people of Ballabgarh are unusually healthy. It is a farming community, so most of them are very physically active and most eat a low-fat, vegetarian diet. Obesity is virtually unheard of.
Life in this fertile farming community is also low in stress, and family support is still strong, unlike in other, more urban parts of India.
"It all leads to a happy body, and a happy mind and hopefully a happy brain," says Dr Chandra.
"Cholesterol levels here are much lower. We believe that is what is protecting the community."
Life in Ballabgarh could not be more different from the complicated, stressful existence many of us lead in the rest of the world. But perhaps this community has something to teach us.
Thursday, 10 December 2009
Good communication reduces reliance on drugs
Good communication reduces reliance on drugs
13 November 2009Victoria Metcalfe, Anchor’s Dementia Team Manager
A specialist, person-centred approach to dementia care can dramatically reduce the use of antipsychotic medication, Anchor Trust’s dementia specialist said this week.
Victoria Metcalfe, Anchor’s Dementia Team Manager said just 12% of residents in Anchor care homes are receiving antipsychotic drugs compared with a sector average of 20% across the UK. The lower use of drugs in Anchor homes is due to a range of relevant, unique and engaging non-pharmaceutical approaches.
Therapy and meaningful occupation are used to reduce stress and improve well being, while extensive training and the involvement of friends and family allows carers to understand the individual’s motivations and the triggers behind certain activities.
‘We adapt our communication approach and focus on the meaning and feelings behind the behaviour, not on the behaviour itself’, said Victoria.
Anchor Trust therefore welcomed the announcement from Care Services Minister Phil Hope of stringent new measures to control the prescription of antipsychotic medication to older people with dementia
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