Palliative care is a branch of medicine that focuses on optimizing the quality of life and providing relief from symptoms. Dementia poses a significant symptom burden both to patients and caregivers with progressive functional deterioration.
The study analysis spotted out a wide array of reasons for referring patients with dementia to specialist palliative care, broadly classified under 13 themes. Several reasons that encourage the involvement of specialist palliative care and simultaneously the lack of consensus on when patients should be referred are thereby highlighted by the present diversity.
“Given the growing recognition of unmet supportive and palliative care needs in patients with dementia, a set of consensual referral criteria may facilitate timely specialist palliative care referral to enhance patient and caregiver outcomes,” says senior author David Hui, MD, MSc, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
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Multidisciplinary approach forms the base for palliative care treatment in dementia and improves the quality of life in patients. Certain points to be addressed for palliative care among dementia patients include the following:
- Provide the patients with simple yet key messages regarding their illness and treatment strategies. This would help ease their anxiety level
- Encourage activities of daily living (ADL) to patients and their participation in social activities
- Timely monitoring of orientation information like day, date, time, place, and names of people would aid in spotting out early deterioration during the disease
- Caregivers need to seek help when they find themselves constrained in stress due to the tiring care given to dementia patients
- Early interventions render better management of dementia
Source: Medindia
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