outcomes of care
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2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 154-154
Author(s):  
Marcus Johansson ◽  
Kevin J McKee ◽  
Lena Dahlberg ◽  
Martina Summer-Meranius ◽  
Christine Williams ◽  
...  

Abstract As welfare providers struggle to meet the care needs of persons with dementia (PwDs), most of their needs are being met by a family carers, most often a spouse. The situation for spouse carers is unique, e.g., with grief, loneliness and loss of intimacy combining with stress and poor health. Research is needed to develop adequate support for spouse carers based on evidence of what influences negative and positive outcomes of care. The present study investigated psychosocial correlates of spouse carers’ (i) negative impact and (ii) positive value of caring. Data from a cross-sectional survey of 165 spouse carers community-resident in Sweden was analysed in two hierarchical regression models to predict negative impact and positive value of caring. Results found that negative impact and positive value were explained by different variables, significant predictors for negative impact included carer stress, health, and emotional loneliness, and change in intimacy with the care-recipient, while positive value was predicted by mutuality, change in closeness to the care-recipient and quality of support. Negative impact and positive value shared variance of only 17.2%. Thus, negative impact and positive value represent different aspects of the carer situation. Consequently, support needs to target several aspects in carers’ life, aiming to; facilitate for spouses to manage PwD’s impairment, increase emotional support while also strengthening the relationship between carer and PwD to reduce negative impact while increasing positive value.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 263-264
Author(s):  
Sheryl Zimmerman ◽  
Lindsay Prizer

Abstract In 2018, the Alzheimer’s Association set forth Dementia Care Practice Recommendations in nine domains, one being support for activities for daily living (e.g., dressing, toileting, eating/nutrition). For example, preservation of dressing independence is important for dignity, autonomy, and to decrease caregiver burden. Measurement is necessary to guide care and assess outcomes related to dressing, but availability of related measures to assess processes, structures, and outcomes of care has not been examined; more so, the extent to which the related measures are person-centered is completely unexplored territory. This session will present a critical assessment of available measures grounded in the Donabedian Model. Of 21 identified measures, 4 assessed dressing alone, 16 included dressing as part of a larger scale, and 1 included dressing as a part of a scale to screen for dementia; none were person-centered. This session will suggest modifications to and need for new measures for person-centered dressing.


Author(s):  
Sebastian Hinde ◽  
Helen Weatherly ◽  
Gabriella Walker ◽  
Lorna K. Fraser

The ‘conventional framework’ of economic evaluation, the comparative public sector healthcare costs and quality adjusted life year (QALY) of two or more interventions, has become synonymous with commissioning decisions in many countries. However, while useful as a framework in guiding value-based decisions, it has limited relevance in areas such as end of life care in children and young people, where the costs fall across multiple stakeholders and QALY gains are not the primary outcome. This paper makes the case that the restricted relevance of the ‘conventional framework’ has contributed to the inconsistent and varied provision of care in this setting, and to the knock-on detrimental impact on children nearing the end of their lives as well as their families. We explore the challenges faced by those seeking to conduct economic evaluations in this setting alongside some potential solutions. We conclude that there is no magic bullet approach that will amalgamate the ‘conventional framework’ with the requirements of a meaningful economic evaluation in this setting. However, this does not imply a lack of need for the summation of the costs and outcomes of care able to inform decision makers, and that methods such as impact inventory analysis may facilitate increased flexibility in economic evaluations.


The Lancet ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 398 ◽  
pp. S9
Author(s):  
Denise Brown ◽  
Mirjam Allik ◽  
Marion Henderson ◽  
Alastair H Leyland

2021 ◽  
pp. 002073142110518
Author(s):  
John Geyman

Privatized Medicare Advantage has grown rapidly among seniors in the United States in recent years. It is now being promoted actively by corporate stakeholders and even by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services itself as a new proposal to extend this approach to cover all Americans. There is little public awareness, however, of the current costs and adverse impacts of Medicare Advantage on enrollees’ access, costs, and outcomes of care while deceptive marketing and disinformation prevails. This article traces the history of Medicare Advantage, outlines false assertions being made by proponents of Medicare Advantage for All, and refutes them based on evidence and their track record. If ever enacted, it would end up lining the pockets of corporate stakeholders and Wall Street investors while limiting access to care, increasing costs, and reducing quality and outcomes of care. The United States already ranks last for access, equity, and outcomes of care in periodic studies by the Commonwealth Fund. This proposal would worsen that situation while costing patients, families, and taxpayers more as their health suffers.


BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. e054664
Author(s):  
Mirjam Allik ◽  
Denise Brown ◽  
Courtney Taylor Browne Lūka ◽  
Cecilia Macintyre ◽  
Alastair H Leyland ◽  
...  

PurposeThe Children’s Health in Care in Scotland Cohorts were set up to provide first population-wide evidence on the health outcomes of care experienced children (CEC) compared with children in the general population (CGP). To date, there are no data on how objective health outcomes, mortality and pregnancies for CEC are different from CGP in Scotland.ParticipantsThe CEC cohort includes school-aged children who were on the 2009/2010 Scottish Government’s Children Looked After Statistics (CLAS) return and on the 2009 Pupil Census (PC). The children in the general population cohort includes those who were on the 2009 PC and not on any of the CLAS returns between 1 April 2007 and 31 July 2016.Findings to dateData on a variety of health outcomes, including mortality, prescriptions, hospitalisations, pregnancies, and Accident & Emergency attendances, were obtained for the period 1 August 2009 to 31 July 2016 for both cohorts. Data on socioeconomic status (SES) for both cohorts were available from the Birth Registrations and a small area deprivation measure was available from the PC. CEC have, on average, lower SES at birth and live in areas of higher deprivation compared with CGP. A higher proportion of CEC have recorded events across all health data sets, and they experienced higher average rates of mortality, prescriptions and hospitalisations during the study period. The reasons for contacting health services vary between cohorts.Future plansAge-standardised rates for the two cohorts by sex and area deprivation will be calculated to provide evidence on population-wide prevalence of main causes of death, reasons for hospitalisation and types of prescription. Event history analysis will be used on matched cohorts to investigate the impact of placement histories and socioeconomic factors on health.


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