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Alzheimers disease Management in the home

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Title: Alzheimers disease Management in the home


1
Alzheimers disease Management in the home
  • Freda Kelley, BSN,RN, CHCE,CDP
  • Foundation Management Service, Inc.

2
Non-Endorsement of Products
  • Approved provider status does not imply
    endorsement by the approved provider, TNA or ANCC
    COA of any commercial products displayed in
    conjunction with an activity.
  • Learners are notified when an educational
    activity relates to any product used for a
    purpose other than for which it was approved by
    the Food and Drug Administration.

3
Continuing Education
  • Requirements for Successful Completion
  • Learners must attend the workshop in its
    entirety. Partial credit will not be awarded
  • Learners must turn in an evaluation at the end of
    the workshop in order to receive a certificate of
    successful completion.

4
Conflicts of Interest
  • Learners will be informed of any influencing
    financial relationships or lack thereof
  • Commercial support Learners will be made fully
    aware of the nature of an commercial support
    related to this educational activity.

5
Learning Objectives
  • Participant will
  • 1. Identify the progressive steps being made with
    CMS in parts of our country in home care
    interpretation of medical policy regarding
    Alzheimers disease care.
  • 2. Describe Alzheimers disease behaviors that
    exhaust the caregiver and may qualify the patient
    for the Medicare home care teaching and training
    benefit.
  • 3. Identify common behaviors associated with
    Alzheimers disease patients, and how to record,
    report and request appropriate intervention.
  • 4. List strategies of the 4-S non-pharmacological
    steps to manage AD
  • 5. Identify the benefits of rehabilitation
    therapy in the home care setting and the
    difference between traditional rehab and the
    Alzheimers disease approach to therapy

6
Impact of Alzheimers Disease
  • The leading cause of dementia among the elderly
  • Currently every 71 seconds, an American develops
    Alzheimers
  • By mid-century an American will develop AD every
    33 seconds
  • AD and other dementias cost the US more than 148
    billion annually in Medicaid and Medicare
    services and in indirect cost to businesses that
    employ AD and dementia caregivers
  • Several promising drugs currently in clinical
    trials could be disease-modifying or provide
    symptomatic relief
  • Increase in AD research funding is critical in
    forestalling both the loss of life and the
    financial burden on the nation

7
Impact of Alzheimers Disease
  • In-home support for families dealing with AD is
    minimal
  • 7 of 10 people with AD live at home
  • 75 of care of people with AD is provided by
    family and friends
  • 80 of caregivers experience high levels of
    stress
  • 50 of caregivers experience depression

8
Impact of Alzheimers Disease
  • 5.2 million Americans (200,000 are under age 65)
  • Number is increasing annually as the population
    continues to age - expected to double by 2020
  • Burden on families and the health care system
    will be substantial as 1 out of every 8 baby
    boomers develops the disease

9
Times do change!
  • September 25, 2001 Transmittal AB-01-138
  • Subject Medical Review of Services for Patients
    with Dementia
  • Contractors may not install edits that result in
    the automatic denial of services based solely on
    the ICD-9 codes for dementia.

10
Times continue to change!
  • April 2002, Mr. Scully of CMS released the
    following statement
  • CMS believes that certain therapies can be
    helpful in slowing a beneficiaries decline.

11
2005 Local Coverage Determination from CMS
  • Contractor Palmetto GBA
  • LCD ID Number - L19817
  • LCD Title
  • Home Health Skilled Nursing Care Teaching and
    Training Alzheimers Disease and Behavioral
    Disturbances
  • Original Determination Effective Date - 10/24/2005

12
Policy Addresses Behavior Disturbances
  • Behavioral disturbances often complicate the
    medical management of beneficiaries with
    Alzheimers disease. At baseline many individuals
    with Alzheimers disease manifest activity
    limitations in such domains as communication and
    self-care. The occurrence of behavioral
    disturbances, if not addressed in a comprehensive
    and systematic manner, may further compromise the
    activity limitations present at
    baseline-resulting in sub-optimal clinical
    outcomes.

13
Why behavior disturbances?
  • Primary treatment of demented persons
  • Highly prevalent during course of disease
  • Important factor influencing family decision to
    choose alternate care placement
  • Agitated behaviors do not serve the interest of
    the patient
  • Agitated behaviors adversely affect others
    efforts to help

14
Behaviors are difficult to assess
  • Unable to verbalize emotions
  • Unable to give reasons for behavior
  • Caregiver is often unable to express

Observation and reporting is the KEY
15
Inside the Human Brain
The Brain in Action
Hearing Words Speaking Words Seeing
Words Thinking about Words
Different mental activities take place in
different parts of the brain. Positron emission
tomography (PET) scans can measure this activity.
Chemicals tagged with a tracer light up
activated regions shown in red and yellow.
Slide 13
16
The truth is
  • We must make caregivers/clinicians aware of
  • What constitutes behavioral disturbances
  • How to report them accurately
  • How to receive appropriate assistance and
    intervention

17
What is a behavioral disturbance
  • Sleeping too much
  • Not sleeping
  • Eating too much
  • Not eating
  • Not bathing
  • Pacing
  • Wandering
  • Agitation
  • Not doing anything
  • Hoarding
  • Crying
  • Worrying
  • Hallucinations
  • Delusions
  • Illusions
  • Paranoia
  • Dressing inappropriately
  • Repetitive behavior
  • And more.

18
2005 Local Coverage Determination (LCD)
  • Each behavioral disturbance should be fully
    characterized
  • What is the behavior?
  • What is the frequency?
  • Is there a triggering event?
  • When does it occur?
  • Where does it occur?
  • Who is involved?
  • Are there other possible explanations?
  • What are the consequences of the behavior?
  • What interventions have been successful in the
    past?
  • What other techniques or interventions can be
    used?

19
Mnemonic.I-T-S-O-V-E-R
  • I - Identify what is the problem behavior?
  • T Timing - when does it happen?
  • S Surroundings - where does it happen?
  • O - Others involved - who else is involved?
  • V - Very troubling - how dangerous is it?
  • E Evaluation what else could cause it?
  • R- Recommend How do I respond?

20
Stages of AD
  • Preclinical
  • Mild
  • Moderate
  • Severe
  • End Stage

21
AD and the BrainPreclinical AD
  • Signs of AD are first noticed in the entorhinal
    cortex, then proceed to the hippocampus
  • Affected regions begin to shrink as nerve cells
    dies
  • Changes can begin 10-20 years before symptoms
    appear
  • Memory loss is the first sign of AD
  • Estimated duration of FAST stage 1 in AD is15
    years

22
Stages of ADMild
  • Forgetfulness, unable to learn new information
  • Difficulty managing finances, planning meals,
    taking medication on schedule
  • Depression symptoms
  • Still able to do most activities, drive car
  • Gets lost going to familiar places
  • Estimated duration of FAST stage 2-4 is 7 to 9
    years

23
Stages of ADModerate
  • Forgetfulness extends to forgetting old facts
  • -Continually repeats stories -Makes up stories
    to fill gaps
  • Difficulty performing tasks
  • -Following written notes -Using the shower and
    toilet
  • Agitation, behavioral symptoms common
  • -Restlessness, repetitive movements -Wandering
  • -Paranoia, delusions, hallucinations
  • Deficits in intellect and reasoning
  • -poor judgment, forgets manners
  • Concern for appearance, hygiene, and sleep become
    more noticeable
  • Estimated duration of FAST stage 5-6 a-e is18 mo
    to 2 years

24
Stages of ADSevere
  • May groan, scream, mumble, or speak gibberish
  • Behavioral symptoms common
  • - refuses to eat
  • - inappropriately cries out
  • Failure to recognize family or faces
  • Difficulty with all essential ADLs
  • Estimated duration of FAST stage 7a-f is 12 to18
    months

25
Teaching and Training
  • Medicare home health beneficiaries with
    Alzheimers disease and behavioral disturbances
    could be part of a unique beneficiary-centered
    plan directed at teaching the family or caregiver
    how to manage the behavioral disturbance.

26
CMS Scenario 1
  • A beneficiary with moderate Alzheimers disease
    is unable to bathe and groom herself. The family
    describes the beneficiary as uncooperative. The
    primary caregiver is a daughter who is trying her
    best to provide assistance and feels frustrated
    by the situation, but would like to learn how to
    work with her mother and keep her at home. The
    beneficiarys physician has determined that the
    uncooperativeness is the result of receptive
    language impairment, perceptual
    misinterpretations, and impairments in learned
    motor skills all due to the Alzheimers
    disease. The teaching services are reasonable and
    necessary for the beneficiarys treatment, and to
    maintain proper hygiene and skin care.

27
Teaching and Training
  • Teach daughter about the disease
  • Teach about amnesia, aphasia, apraxia, and
    agnosia and how each symptom can influence a
    level of cooperativeness or uncooperativeness
  • Teach how to simplify the environment
  • Teach how to make the bathroom safe and
    comfortable

28
Teaching and training.
  • Reduce clutter, reduce noise, get organized ahead
    of time, appropriate temperature of the room
  • Keep communication simple
  • Use bridging or chaining techniques
  • Safe transfer techniques
  • Depth perception techniques
  • Creative in approach

29
More teaching
  • Attitude and tone is everything and if the
    caregiver is tired.ooops!
  • Demonstration is a great way to learn
  • Home care allows a relationship to be developed
    and adult education methods to be utilized
  • The person with dementia may not remember your
    name, but they WILL remember how you make them
    FEEL!

30
Occupational Therapy
  • Supporting the Local Medical Review policy for
    Alzheimers disease care in the home setting is
    the American Occupational Therapy Association
    Practice Guidelines for Adults with Alzheimers
    Disease.

31
Research shows
  • Continuation of activity is critical to limiting
    behavioral problems associated with AD
  • Performance of ADLs often can be improved by
    modifying task requirements and adapting the
    environment
  • OT helps people regain, develop and build skills
    that are essential for ADL
  • This ability can reduce negative behaviors and
    alleviate caregiver stress!

32
Joseph Isaacs, executive director of AOTA stated
May 14, 2005
  • When an occupational therapist addresses
    cognitive problems, memory, environment and
    family issues, it can mean the difference between
    acceptance and adjustment or continued and
    growing crisis for families and the Alzheimer's
    patients themselves. Occupational therapy
    intervention can help slow the decline of
    patients and even prevent placement in nursing
    homes.

33
Therapy with the AD Patient
  • Traditional Rehab
  • Restore
  • Assess deficits
  • Remediate deficits
  • Adapt patient to environment
  • Teach patient
  • Teach new tasks
  • Alzheimers Approach
  • Compensate and adapt
  • Assess abilities
  • Facilitate strengths
  • Adapt environment to patient
  • Teach caregiver
  • Adapt task to patient

34
CMS Scenario 2
  • A physician has ordered skilled nursing care for
    teaching behavioral techniques to a care giving
    niece of a patient with moderate Alzheimers
    disease to gain the patients cooperation during
    mealtime. Due to the patients wandering
    behaviors, she will not stay seated for a meal
    and the niece believes she is trying to be
    difficult. The patient has been gradually losing
    weight (10 pounds over 2 months) and she is less
    coordinated with her utensils due to her
    underlying dementia as well as a new onset
    tremor. The teaching services are reasonable and
    necessary for the patients treatment and
    adequate nutritional intake.

35
CMS says
  • While the ultimate goal of clinical interventions
    addressing persons with Alzheimer's disease and
    behavioral disturbances is an improvement in
    function, it is anticipated that the
    beneficiaries served under this policy will have
    diverse clinical presentations and environmental
    factors.

36
Home Health Teaching Interventions
  • Teach primary symptoms of AD, amnesia, aphasia,
    apraxia, agnosia and how each of these symptoms
    can influence the patients functional ability
    and level of cooperativeness at mealtime
  • Explore strategies to decrease wandering at
    mealtimetoilet before meals, take for a walk
    before meals, wait to seat until the meal is on
    the table, position the patient in a comfortable
    place
  • Reduce clutter, reduce need for utensils, add
    finger foods
  • Give one food at a time, limit verbal cuing to
    one step at a time.
  • Use bridging or chaining techniques

37
Home Health Teaching Interventions
  • Turn off television or radio
  • Consider fortified supplements between meals
  • Begin meal with favorite foods
  • Evaluate, consider adaptive equipment or
    Occupational Therapy referral
  • Cut or prepare food ready for easy intake
  • Look for signs of poor dental hygiene
  • Look for signs of difficulty swallowingpocketing
    foods in cheeks.

38
Home Health Teaching Interventions
  • Assess medication regimen
  • Assess bowel habits
  • Monitor weight
  • Have someone else eat at the same time so that
    behavior modeling can potentially occur
  • Assess for psychiatric symptoms such as
    depression, paranoid delusions that could result
    in a decreased food and fluid intake and notify
    the physician.

39
Basic Principles
  • The 4 S Approach
  • Kevin Gray, MD

40
The 4- S Approach
  • Safety
  • Serenity
  • Structure
  • Sanity

41
Safety
  • More than child-proofing medications, lethal
    poisons, firearms, matches, sharps, power
    tools, gasoline for the lawn mower.
  • Hot water heater temperatures lowered
  • Secure locks - wandering
  • ID bracelets
  • Kitchen junk drawer
  • Mail
  • Driving
  • Bathroom door locks

42
Serenity
  • God grant me the serenity to accept the things I
    cannot change the courage to change the things I
    can and the wisdom to know the difference.

43
Serenity
  • Serenity begins with a deliberate and practiced
    management of affect on the part of the
    caregiver.
  • Communicate affection, provide reassurance and
    use simple distractions when tensions rise
  • Tapping into remote memories via reminiscence can
    be helpful

44
Structure
  • Make the environment regular and predictable and
    familiar as possible
  • Patience is the key and allows new habits
  • Establishing routine is critical

45
Sanity
  • Preserving caregiver sanity allows for optimal
    patient care!
  • Caregiver burnout is a major determinate of
    nursing home placement.
  • Caregivers struggle with the added burden of
    responsibility and the loss of the relationship
    of the loved one they are caring for.
  • Social isolation occurs for the caregiver.

46
Sanity
  • Criticism of family or clinicians may undermine
    sanity of caregiver.
  • Helping caregiver set reasonable limits and
    goals, along with reminders that rest is
    required.
  • Caregivers should remind and assist rather than
    take over and foster dependency.

47
Welcome to 21st Century Home Care
  • Home care offers the incredible opportunity to
    provide medically appropriate, evidence-based,
    therapeutic teaching and training to the millions
    of home caregivers who are providing care and
    support to loved one with Alzheimers disease.

48
Learning Objectives
  • Participant will
  • 1. Identify the progressive steps being made with
    CMS in parts of our country in home care
    interpretation of medical policy regarding
    Alzheimers disease care.
  • 2. Describe Alzheimers disease behaviors that
    exhaust the caregiver and may qualify the patient
    for the Medicare home care teaching and training
    benefit.
  • 3. Identify common behaviors associated with
    Alzheimers disease patients, and how to record,
    report and request appropriate intervention.
  • 4. List strategies of the 4-S non-pharmacological
    steps to manage AD
  • 5. Identify the benefits of rehabilitation
    therapy in the home care setting and the
    difference between traditional rehab and the
    Alzheimers disease approach to therapy

49
References
  • www.CMS.gov
  • www.alz.org
  • www.alzfdn.org
  • Barry Reisberg, MD
  • Kevin Gray, MD
  • International Conference on Alzheimers Disease
    2008

50
Research Update
  • Does one protein mechanism underlie the
    development of plaques and tangles?
  • Which risk factors most accurately predict the
    development of dementia?
  • How does the communication style of caregivers
    affect the quality of life of individuals with
    Alzheimers disease (AD)?
  • The Alzheimers Association 2008 International
    Conference on
  • Alzheimers Disease (ICAD), held July 2631in
    Chicago, sought to
  • answer these and other questions in diverse areas
    ranging from drug
  • trials to genetics, neuroimaging, diagnosis and
    social and behavioral
  • issues in AD and other forms of Dementia.

51
Highlights of Research FindingsInternational
Conference on Alzheimers Disease
  • Disease mechanisms and therapeutic strategies
  • Biomarkers
  • Risk factors and prevention
  • Communication style and quality of life
  • Research is moving on all fronts and in
    unexpected directions.
  • Sam Gandy, MD, PhD of the Mount Sinai School of
    Medicine in New York, New York

52
Therapeutic Strategies
  • Treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg)
    over nine months resulted in statistically
    significant improvements on both cognitive and
    global clinical measures in a Phase II trial of
    individuals with mild-to-moderate AD.
  • On the market for more than 25 years as a
    treatment for
  • autoimmune diseases, IVIg contains antibodies
    that bind to the beta-amyloid aggregates thought
    to be central to AD.
  • A Phase III clinical trial is under way. If final
    trail is successful, this may be available 2012

53
Therapeutic Strategies
  • In a study recently reported, Dimebon
    (Medivation) improved cognition and memory,
    activities of daily living, and behavior in a
    one-year placebo-controlled trial of patients
    with mild to moderate Alzheimer's. At ICAD 2008,
    Jeffrey L. Cummings, M.D., the Augustus S. Rose
    Professor of Neurology, and Professor of
    Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, at UCLA,
    and colleagues reported on an open-label
    extension of the trial to 18 months.
  • Dimebon was well-tolerated through 18 months.
    Adverse events that occurred more often with
    dimebon compared to placebo were dry mouth,
    sweating and depressed mood/sadness.
  • "Dimebon appears to work through a mechanism of
    action that is distinct from currently marketed
    Alzheimer's drugs. Dimebon improves impaired
    mitochondrial function. Mitochondria are the
    central energy source of all cells and impaired
    mitochondrial function may play a significant
    role in the loss of brain cell function in
    Alzheimer's," Cummings added.

54
Rember (methylthioninium chloride)
  • The first medication directly to attack the
    tangles that develop in the brains of those
    affected with AD
  • The tangles, made up of a protein know as tau,
    form inside nerve cells in the brain and impair
    concentration and memory. The tangles first
    destroy the nerve cells linked to memory and then
    destroy neurons in other parts of the brain as
    the disease progresses
  • If the final trial is successful, Rember could be
    available by 2012

55
Therapeutic Strategies - Rember
  • A 24-week, Phase II trial of methylthioninium
    chloride (MTC) followed by a 60-week extension
    trial found that at 24 weeks MTC produced a
    significant improvement relative to placebo.
  • The compound stabilized the progression of AD
    over 50 weeks in both mild and moderate AD.
  • MTC, which dates from the 1930s, inhibits the
    aggregation of tau, the protein that forms the
    neurofibrillary tangles of AD. Among its earlier
    uses, it was used as an antibiotic.
  • A Phase III trial is planned.

56
Challenges with Research
  • Slow decline in placebo groups in clinical trials
  • Phase III clinical trials carry a high risk of
    failure because of the potential of larger sample
    sizes and longer trial durations to produce
    results different from the smaller shorter Phase
    II trials
  • Physical changes to the brain in AD begin years
    before clinical symptoms such as memory loss
    develop
  • Biomarkers would enable researchers to set
    changes as evidence of a clinical trials success

57
Challenges with Research
  • There is a movement to identify the disease
  • earlier and earlier, and we need pre-symptomatic
  • biomarkers to do this. A consistent theme has
  • emerged of early detection for early
    intervention.
  • Ronald Petersen, M.D., of the Mayo Clinic,
    Rochester,
  • Minnesota, United States.

58
Timely Diagnosis Will Provide
  • A helpful framework for understanding symptoms
  • An opportunity to build the right medical team
  • Access to existing medications
  • An opportunity to participate in studies of
    experimental drugs or other treatments
  • Access to programs and service
  • Enhanced safety and security
  • An opportunity to plan for the future

59
National Memory Screening Day
  • Alzheimer's Foundation of AmericaNational Memory
    Screening Day6th Annual Event
  • Save the Date
  • November 18, 2008
  • National Memory Screening Day is a collaborative
    effort spearheaded by the Alzheimer's Foundation
    of America to promote early detection of
    Alzheimer's disease and related illnesses, and to
    encourage appropriate intervention.
  • AFA carries out this event in collaboration with
    organizations and healthcare professionals across
    the U.S.bringing them together for care.
    Participating sites offer free confidential
    memory screenings, as well as follow up resources
    and educational materials to those concerned
    about memory loss. Together, we hope to improve
    quality of life.

60
Alzheimers Association Memory Walk
  • 32 Walks in Texas
  • First in 2008 Katy, Texas September 9
  • Still coming College Station and Dallas, TX
  • November 15
  • Not too late to join a team or donate

61
Risk Factors and Prevention
  • Early studies have shown consistent findings of
    physical and mental inactivity associated with
    higher risk of cognitive decline
  • A study of 422 healthy people over the age of 60,
  • showed that those with metabolic syndrome had an
    almost 35 higher level of cognitive compromise
    than those without metabolic syndrome

62
Communication Style and Quality of Life
  • Elderspeak defined as overly caring,
    controlling and infantilizing communication by
    caregivers
  • Research shows there is increased resistance to
    care by nursing home resident with dementia
  • Probability of resistance to care (RTC) was .55
    with elderspeak and .26 with normal communication
  • Other communication studies are also being
    conducted

63
Summary
  • Alzheimers Disease is impacting our world, our
    nation, our neighborhoods, our workplaceour
    healthcare system.
  • We must be alert, attentive and pro-active in the
    course of this disease.
  • Thank you for your time and attention.

64
Memories.
  • My Mama and Daddy - 1935
  • My Granddaughter - 2008
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