scholarly journals Comparative Analysis of Dementia Care Programs and Delivery Models

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 143-144
Author(s):  
Allie Peckham ◽  
Marianne Saragosa ◽  
Madeline King ◽  
Monika Roerig ◽  
Gregory Marchildon

Abstract Dementia has significant social and economic impacts for those living with dementia and their caregivers. Despite an increase in prevalence of complex chronic conditions and dementia, long-term care services are continuously pushed out of institutional settings and into the home and community. The majority of people living with dementia in Canada and the United States (U.S.) live at home with support provided by family, friends, or other unpaid caregivers. Ten dementia care programs and service delivery models across five different North American jurisdictions in Canada and the U.S. are compared using a deductive analytical approach using a comparative policy framework developed by Richard Rose. The policy efforts included in this research attempt to improve health system flow and access for vulnerable populations. One common theme among all jurisdictions are long-standing institutional barriers that can make change difficult. These barriers can prevent the ability for systems to be flexible and adapt to meet the changing needs of populations. Incrementalism is often considered an appropriate approach to health system reform. Yet, incremental change efforts lead to policy layers and these layers can lead to tension between different policy mixes and unintended consequences. These programs were introduced in a manner that did not fully consider how to patch current structures and risk creating further system redundancies. One approach to reduce this risk is to combine evaluative efforts that assess ‘goodness of fit’. The degree to which these programs have embedded these efforts successfully is low, with the possible exception of DSRIP from NY.

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 930-931
Author(s):  
Sarah Dys ◽  
Jaclyn Winfree ◽  
Paula Carder ◽  
Kaylin Dugle ◽  
Sheryl Zimmerman ◽  
...  

Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected long-term care operators, staff, residents and their families; although much attention has been given to nursing homes, largely lost in the discourse are assisted living, residential care, and dementia care (AL) communities. As part of a broader, ongoing study assessing states’ AL regulations regarding medical and mental health care for residents with Alzheimer’s and related dementias (ADRD), stakeholders across the United States were recruited in July and August 2020 for semi-structured interviews to provide their perspectives on AL policies and practices specific to COVID-19 response. Stakeholders (n=32) consisted of state healthcare and trade association representatives, clinical practitioners, operators, researchers, and dementia care experts experienced in AL-related operational, healthcare, and regulatory affairs. Using thematic analysis, we describe several emerging topics regarding the opportunities, challenges, and innovations of responding to COVID-19 within the unique context of AL. States’ public health responses to COVID-19 lacked an understanding of the broader long-term care system, especially AL’s scope and purpose, workforce, capacity to implement infection control practices and policies, and unintended consequences of social isolation for older adults, specifically residents living in dementia care units. Despite these challenges, stakeholders described opportunities to expand telehealth infrastructure, communication and collaboration across states and among operators, and several innovations to mitigate the effects of social isolation. It is imperative for policymakers to understand the nuances of the AL context and design regulations and public health responses grounded in a whole-person perspective and in partnership with operators during, and beyond, pandemic circumstances.


2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Donato ◽  
Jeffrey Richardson

Diagnosis-based risk adjustment is increasingly seen as an important tool for establishing capitation payments and evaluating appropriateness and efficiency of services provided and has become an important area of research for many countries contemplating health system reform. This paper examines the application of a risk-adjustment method, extensively validated in the United States, known as diagnostic cost groups (DCG), to a large Australian hospital inpatient data set. The data set encompassed hospital inpatient diagnoses and inpatient expenditure for the entire metropolitan population residing in the state of New South Wales. The DCG model was able to explain 34% of individual-level variation in concurrent expenditure and 5.2% in subsequent year expenditure, which is comparable to US studies using inpatient-only data. The degree of stability and internal consistency of the parameter estimates for both the concurrent and prospective models indicate the DCG methodology has face validity in its application to NSW health data sets. Modelling and simulations were conducted which demonstrate the policy applications and significance of risk adjustment model(s) in the Australian context. This study demonstrates the feasibility of using large individual-level data sets for diagnosis-based risk adjustment research in Australia. The results suggest that a research agenda should be established to broaden the options for health system reform.


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