Sedating dementia ► a global alert, shocking disparities and a blueprint for action!

Towards transforming quality and safety in dementia care.

 

What’s the global problem here?

WHO report (2012) affirms that drugs given for the management of behavioural and psychological symptoms in dementia are being overprescribed globally. Although first-line treatment for behaviour that challenges is non-pharmacological, the prescription of psychotropics remains high and it appears that current systems deliver a largely antipsychotic-based response. Prevalence rates of antipsychotics prescribing range from 20% to 33% and most cases are residing in care homes.

What harms can antipsychotics do to people with dementia?

1,000 people with dementia on an antipsychotic x 12 weeks = 10 extra deaths + 18 extra cerebrovascular events + 58–94 gait disturbances!

Does Europe overprescribe too?

The Alzheimer Cooperative Valuation in Europe (ALCOVE), described in a previous blog, confirms that people living with dementia in Europe are overexposed to antipsychotics.
Whilst the prevalence in over 65s was 10.6% in the general population, and 22% in memory assessment units, prescribing was highest in care homes at 35.6% (25.8 % in Norway and 60% in Italy).
It goes further; overuse of antidepressants, prolonged use of antipsychotics, concomitant use (two antipsychotics or with other psychotropics e.g. hypnotics), or absence of use as second-line after a non-pharmacological approach are also reported. 

These variations are as alarming as they are unacceptable!

Do we have affordable solutions?

There aren’t that many health economic studies. In one cohort of 133,713 individuals with dementia requiring antipsychotic drugs in England, in fact it was estimated that behavioural interventions cost £27.6 million more per year than antipsychotic drugs. 

However, the additional investment was offset by nearly £70.4 million in healthcare savings due to reduced incidence of strokes and falls, and quality of life improvements to the tune of £12.0 million in benefits per annum. Non-pharmacological interventions therefore represented an efficient use of public resources.

Can the ALCOVE toolbox help?  

For an overview find out in this video (French subtitles

 

What’s in the box?  ☞

(1)  risk exposure measures in Europe

(2) models of tried and tested risk reduction programmes

  • England’s The Right Prescription; Call to Action, (reduced Antipsychotic prescriptions for people with dementia by 52% in three years) and
  • France’s National Authority for Health  programme (reduced the rate of Antipsychotics exposure in people with Alzheimer’s disease from 16.9% to 15.5% over 3 years). In fact the French ‘mastering indicator’ is used as a proxy Quality of Life indicator, as a measure of national implementation progress and as a quality indicator for care homes. 

(3) links to timely diagnosis

(4) ethical principles underpinning prescribing, and

(5) national programmes to prevent and manage behavioural and psychological symptoms in dementia.

Shaking the tree!

Behaviours that challenge in dementia are almost always a product of complex interactions between care structures and organisations, individual factors, and workforce skills.

ALCOVE contains an up-to-date evidence base for interventions that work and proposes a 3 D model for reference in all settings.

Here then is an opportunity to begin (or continue) conversations to limit the use of antipsychotics and other psychotropics for people with dementia.

This goes deeper! In fact this is a blueprint to help unravel, develop and deliver alternatives to chemical restraints. A seismic culture shift. A transformation in care standards. An end to letting down vulnerable people!

What we have here is a potent yet underused proxy for quality and safety in dementia care globally.

Whether you are a concerned member of the public, a person living with dementia, or clinician, I hope this toolbox might assist you to weave your own priorities, perspectives and partnerships into implementing what’s right for your local community.

Let’s shake this tree and see what happens?

@KarimS3D

 

Who’s keeping an eye on ‘brains at risk’? The FAQs

What 3 top priorities can dementia services in developed countries focus on?

  • Prevention
  • Early interventions
  • Researching a cure

Has the clinical community caught on to this?

The public may want earlier interventions, clinicians are still divided. For many, this remains controversial.

Meanwhile, the ‘gold-standard’ American diagnostic criteria have reclassified Alzheimer’s disease (28 years since their first issue) into 3 stages:

(1) Pre-Clinical Dementia: brain changes predate symptoms

(2) Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI): early enough to be noticed but too mild to be named dementia. MCI is a state not a disease. Some ‘convert’ to

(3) Alzheimer’s dementia

NHS dementia services only address stage (3)!

Why is prevention and earlier intervention important? 

  • Identifying ‘brains at risk’ in middle age may yield strategies to forestall conversion of MCI to Alzheimer’s disease, and
  • Early identification = advance planning = choice = autonomy + savings = quality care.

So are we there yet?

As we await disease modifying treatments, we are refining our grasp of

  • Biomarkers: various clinical and lab tests to predict MCI/Alzheimer’s dementia, like scans and lumbar punctures.
  • Risk Factors: and a range of lifestyle, social and clinical Interventions to manage brains at risk.

What about all the bad press?

The potentially stigmatising effect of “pre-dementia” can be offset by the empowerment of an early diagnosis and disease control. It is our focus on later stages which may be perpetuating negative perceptions.

Surely telling someone they have MCI causes unnecessary anxiety and depression?

Not everyone wants to know. However, the opposite can also be true. Disclosure, to many who suspect something is amiss can relieve anxiety and extend choice.

What evidence is there that this works?

Some evidence supporting the benefits of controlling high cholesterol, high blood pressure and various lifestyle modifications like eating healthily, taking exercise, smoking cessation and avoiding hazardous alcohol consumption in middle age. This approach successfully reduced the prevalence of heart disease in the UK. We know that intellectual stimulation, the right diet, good control of diabetes and depression may reduce the incidence of dementia. Protective factors include active lifestyles, social connectedness and mental resilience.

Some innovations like the productive ward were piloted without ‘evidence’, and it is through refinement of prototype that made them so successful. Lack of ‘evidence’ does not mean evidence of absence of an effect.

Meanwhile we await 3 European Alzheimer’s dementia prevention trials underway in Finland, Holland and France to announce results in the near future.

How much is needed to invest in identifying and targeting brains at risk?

Many prevention platforms already exist within the NHS e.g. Health Checksprimary care liaison workers and a sub-type of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBTplus), developed within the ‘Take Heart’ service, probably the only MCI service in England.

Might this save money?

Considerable savings projected though not instantly.

Estimates based on unpublished health-economics assumptions suggest £230m savings in 10 years (England & Wales) and £3.8b by 2033 (a fifth current spend on Dementia).

There’d be no wisdom in ignoring this. Whichever way you look, dementia is on the increase (longer lives, worse lifestyles & pressure to increase woefully low detection rates).

Where is this all going?

Digital apps and telehealth will complement ‘human’ services.

MCI-friendly and dementia-friendly zones…including your local gym, supermarket, school, pharmacy.

Proactive and portable expertise closer to home, promoting wellbeing and optimal ageing.

Alzheimer’s disease will stay ‘invisible’ for decades before we see it. Measuring and protecting mental capital should be an option open to you and me!

It’s all about choice!

@KarimS3D