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Systematic Care for Informal Caregivers of Dementia Patients: An Efficient Approach?

Primary Purpose

Dementia, Vascular, Dementia, Alzheimer Disease

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Netherlands
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Diagnosis of caregivers' problems
Professional service: treatment of problems by counseling or practical support
Sponsored by
Radboud University Medical Center
About
Eligibility
Locations
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional diagnostic trial for Dementia, Vascular focused on measuring Dementia, Alzheimer Disease, Lewy-Body, Cost*, Community (dwelling), Caregiver(s), Institutionalization, Quality of life, Randomized Control Trail, Vascular dementia

Eligibility Criteria

undefined - undefined (Child, Adult, Older Adult)All SexesAccepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion Criteria: Pairs of patients and their informal caregivers visiting the ambulatory mental health care service for the first time and treated by the professionals participating in the study Exclusion Criteria: Patients and caregivers not mastering the Dutch language

Sites / Locations

  • Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Patients admissions to nursing homes or residential homes. This outcome is the most important input for the estimation of cost differences between the intervention group and controls.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Secondary outcome for cost estimation is patient and caregiver related costs estimated by "Resource Utilisation in Dementia" (RUD), including time spent on caregiving, use of health care services by caregivers and patients and additional productivity.

Full Information

First Posted
September 6, 2005
Last Updated
September 30, 2008
Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center
Collaborators
ZonMw: The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT00147693
Brief Title
Systematic Care for Informal Caregivers of Dementia Patients: An Efficient Approach?
Official Title
Systematic Care for Informal Caregivers of Dementia Patients: An Efficient Approach?
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
September 2008
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
June 2005 (undefined)
Primary Completion Date
February 2006 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
February 2006 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Name of the Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center
Collaborators
ZonMw: The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development

4. Oversight

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
The objective is to ascertain the potential efficiency of a systematic care programme for caregivers of dementia patients. The research questions are: What are the costs and benefits of the Systematic Care Programme - Dementia (SCP-Dementia), as compared with usual care? What are the effects on the quality of life of patients and informal caregivers (spouse, relative), as compared with usual care?
Detailed Description
A major challenge for future health care is the care for dementia patients and their informal caregivers. In usual care, the problems of caregivers often remain invisible until a crisis occurs. This inhibition is partly the result of informal caregivers paying scant attention to their own problems. Another reason is that professionals may not know how to support informal caregivers pro-actively (Van Hout et al., 2000). Therefore the family support programme (Bengtson, 1985: Vernooij et al., 2000) has been transformed into a Systematic Care Programme (SCP-Dementia). The reasons for choosing and studying the efficiency of this programme are the potential to diagnose and treat problems systematically, to cover a wide range of individual problems, its flexibility in connecting interventions to these problems, its suitability for pro-activity and the positive effects of the programme found in our previous study (Vernooij et al., 2000). To study its efficiency a cluster randomised controlled trial design will be used. Randomisation will take place in each of three participating regions. Professionals in the ambulatory mental health care services (psychologists and social psychiatric nurses) will be randomly assigned to either the intervention group or the control group before the recruitment of patients and informal caregivers. The study population consists of pairs of patients and their informal caregivers visiting the ambulatory mental health care service for the first time. The intervention is the training in SCP-Dementia and its subsequent use. SCP-Dementia consists of an assessment of the caregiver's sense of competence and suggestions on how to deal with deficiencies in competence. The follow-up period is one year. The primary outcome is patients´ admissions to nursing homes or residential homes. The secondary outcome is quality of life. Caregivers´ quality of life is assessed by sense of competence (SCQ), depression (CES-D) and physical quality of life (EuroQol). Patients´ quality of life by behavioral problems is assessed by the NPI-Q and the QOL-AD-Scale. The difference in proposed effect was based on previous research in which 14% of the patients in the intervention group and 28% in the control group were institutionalized (Vernooij-Dassen, 1993;1995). To detect a 50% reduction in institutionalization rates with 80% power at the two sided significance level of 0.05, 132 patient-caregiver dyads would be needed for each of the intervention and control arm. We inflated this sample size by a design effect of 1.15 to 152 dyads per trial arm to allow for correlation of dyads within the same cluster (i.e. professional), assuming an average cluster size of four and an intracluster correlation coefficient of 0.05. Assuming a 25% dropout rate of patient-caregiver dyads, the study needed an final enrolment of 190 dyads in each trial arm. The economic evaluation is a cost-effectiveness analysis regarding a societal perspective. In the economic evaluation both costs and effects will be monetarized and consequently will result in a net benefit.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Dementia, Vascular, Dementia, Alzheimer Disease, Lewy Body Disease
Keywords
Dementia, Alzheimer Disease, Lewy-Body, Cost*, Community (dwelling), Caregiver(s), Institutionalization, Quality of life, Randomized Control Trail, Vascular dementia

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Diagnostic
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Factorial Assignment
Masking
Outcomes Assessor
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
304 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Diagnosis of caregivers' problems
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Professional service: treatment of problems by counseling or practical support
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Patients admissions to nursing homes or residential homes. This outcome is the most important input for the estimation of cost differences between the intervention group and controls.
Time Frame
after one year follow-up period
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Secondary outcome for cost estimation is patient and caregiver related costs estimated by "Resource Utilisation in Dementia" (RUD), including time spent on caregiving, use of health care services by caregivers and patients and additional productivity.

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Pairs of patients and their informal caregivers visiting the ambulatory mental health care service for the first time and treated by the professionals participating in the study Exclusion Criteria: Patients and caregivers not mastering the Dutch language
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Myrra M Vernooij-Dassen, PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Coordinator Alzheimer Centre UMC Nijmegen
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre
City
Nijmegen
Country
Netherlands

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Citations:
PubMed Identifier
19500421
Citation
Spijker A, Verhey F, Graff M, Grol R, Adang E, Wollersheim H, Vernooij-Dassen M. Systematic care for caregivers of people with dementia in the ambulatory mental health service: designing a multicentre, cluster, randomized, controlled trial. BMC Geriatr. 2009 Jun 7;9:21. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-9-21.
Results Reference
derived

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Systematic Care for Informal Caregivers of Dementia Patients: An Efficient Approach?

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