People with dementia have complex medical, social, and psychological needs and can be exacerbated by physical illness and the complex relationships between health care systems, patients and their families or caregivers. They are a vulnerable and fragile population that differs significantly from the population without dementia. Therefore, the investigators propose the following objectives: 1. To describe the evolution of dementia patients admitted during the study period in two hospitals in the Basque Health Service-Osakidetza and complications associated with such admissions. 2. To compare with a control group (matched by type of pathology, age and sex and adjusting for other clinical variables (severity of dementia ...) the patient's condition before and after admission, in terms of quality of life, dependency, instrumental activities of daily living and severity of dementia. 3. To compare the length of stay, complications, mortality rate, the degree of dependency and quality of life of patients with dementia compared to those without dementia, matched by groups of pathologies, gender and age.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
413
Patients diagnosed of dementia who ingresed the hospital were informed of the goals of the study and invited to voluntarily participate. In order to take part in the study, patients were required to provide informed consent. All participants were first screened with the Alzheimer's Disease Test. A diagnosis of dementia was generated by an independent clinician experienced in old age psychiatry using a structured clinical assessment based on operationalized DSM-IV criteria. Clinical data were gathered from hospital notes. Information on sociodemographic data, premorbid basic and instrumental activities of daily living, quality of life and burden of the caregiver was gathered from carers and review of hospital notes. In both cohorts, participants were telephoned 3 months after hospital admission to respond the follow-up questionnaires. Patients who decided not to answer them were considered lost to follow-up. All information was kept confidential.
Mortality during hospitalization and at follow-up
In-hospital mortality, and at follow-up: information on survival status of the patients was collected during hospitalization and assessed 3 months after discharge by telephone interview to patients or caregivers.
Time frame: Up to 3 months
The Alzheimer's Disease Test (AD8)
The Alzheimer's Disease Test (AD8) is a brief informant-based measure that reliably distinguishes individuals with very mild dementia from those with normal cognition \[Galvin et al., 2005). The AD8 is composed of 8 items. In the initial development of the AD8, using a cutoff of 2 or greater on the AD8 to predict dementia gave the most desirable combination of sensitivity (85%) and specificity (86%).
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Assessment of Performance in Basic Activities of Daily Living: Barthel Index
The Barthel Index is a scale used for the assessment of performance in basic activities of daily living \[Mahoney \& Barthel, 1965) that considers 10 basic functions and yields a score of 0-100. A higher score is associated with a greater likelihood of being able to live at home with a degree of independence following discharge from hospital. It was categorized according to four cutoff points, which are as follows: 75-100 as reference (no-mild disability), 50-74 (moderate disability), 25-49 (severe disability), and 0-24 (completely dependent).
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL)
Lawton and Brody score was determined as a function of patient status 2 weeks before admission, based on the patient's medical history or information supplied by a caregiver. IADL assesses ability to use the telephone, to shop, to use transport, to cook, to do housework, to take medication and to handle finances. 0 indicates total dependence and the maximum score (8) indicates total independence.
Time frame: Up to 3 months
EuroQoL 5-domain for Health-related quality of life (EQ-5D) (EuroQoL Group, 1990).
This well-established generic instrument which measures health-related QoL has five domains: mobility, self-care, pain/discomfort, usual activities, and anxiety/depression. The respondents also rate their own health today on a visual analogue scale from 100 (best imaginable health state) to 0 (worst imaginable health state). The data can be presented descriptively as a health profile, and a single index utility score can be calculated.
Time frame: Up to 3 months
The Quality of Life in Alzheimer's disease (QOL-AD)
\- The QOL-AD, a 13-item scale (range, 13 to 52, with higher scores indicating a better QOL) was used to examine AD-specific QOL (Logsdon et al., 1999). It has 13 items covering the domains of physical health, energy, mood, living situation, memory, family, marriage, friends, chores, fun, money, self, and life as a whole. These are scored on a 4-point Likert scale, ranging from 1 (poor) to 4 (excellent), with a possible total range from 13 to 52. The scale obtains separate ratings of the patient's QoL from both the patient and the caregiver, where available. These scores can be combined into a single score, weighting the person with dementia's own QoL score twice as heavily as the caregiver's. Early studies by Logsdon et al. (1999) suggest it to have good internal consistency, construct validity, and test-retest reliability. In this study, only the caregiver of the person with dementia's self-reported QoL was evaluated.
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Caregiver's burden was evaluated with the Zarit Scale
A reduced Zarit scale is useful to identify caregiver burden in dementias (with a sensitivity 98,5% and specificity of 94,7%), and it is also easy to use (Gort et al., 2010). Fields explored with the 4 items Zarit scale were overburden (items 9 and 14), irritability (item 5) and the self-care (item 2). These are scored on a 5-point Likert scale, ranging from 1 (never) to 4 (most times). Higher score, more burden. (in online material)
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Diagnosis
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Body Mass Index (BMI)
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Nutritional status
Blood test which included serum albumin, total cholesterol, electrolytes, total lymphocyte count was made.
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Level of consciousness: The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) was employed to measure consciousness (Teasdale \& Jennett, 1974). In this scale the normal state merits a score of 15, and as level of consciousness deteriorates, the score becomes less. (Teasdale \& Jennett, 1974).
Time frame: Up to 3 months
Pressure Ulcer risk: the Braden Scale and the Gosnell Scale were employed.
The Braden Scale (Bergstrom et al., 1987) is a summated rated scale comprised of 6 subscales: sensory perception, mobility, activity, moisture, nutrition, and friction and shear. The 6 subscales are rated from 1 to 4, except the friction and shear subscale, which is rated from 1 to 3. Each numerical rating has a definition of patient characteristics to evaluate when assigning a score. A total of 6 to 23 points is possible.
Time frame: Up to 3 months
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