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Collaborative Care for the Advanced Dementia Patient

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Title: Collaborative Care for the Advanced Dementia Patient


1
Collaborative Care for the Advanced Dementia
Patient
Michelle Tristani, MS/CCC-SLP Rehab Clinical
Specialist
2
Interdisciplinary Pilot Study Overview
  • Pilot Foundation Theories
  • Pilot Roles and Procedures
  • Pre-Implementation Survey
  • Pilot Study Rehab Nursing Assessment Tools
  • Tool Kit Implementation
  • Post-Implementation Analysis
  • Functional Maintenance Program Implementation
  • Pilot Study Feedback Future Directions

3
Communication is key to quality of life. We
need to implement cognitive programming that is
skilled care and billable while impacting not
only the living environment for residents but
also the work environment for the staff with whom
they interact. Lou Eaves
Foundation Theories for the Pilot Study
4
Cognitive Approach Assumptions
  • Cognition underlies all behaviors
  • Cognitive disability impairs the individuals
    cognitive ability to perform a motor action
  • Cognitive disability data can be obtained from
    functional observation
  • Cognitive capacities (information processing)
    limitation of the individual can be gleaned by
    observing the quality of functional performance
  • Cognitive hierarchy levels speak to the
    qualitative differences in routine task behaviors
    that are observed
  • Environmental Compensations are the most viable
    interventions for long-term cognitive
    disabilities from pathological
  • brain conditions

5
Information Processing Model
  • Processing starts with sensory input
  • Sensorimotor associations
  • Interpretive processes from sensory cues
  • We pursue activities with varying goals, ranging
    from movement, to cause and effect, to
    investment in producing a high-quality outcome
  • Motor actions
  • Elicited by sensory cues
  • Guided by sensorimotor actions
  • Observed in activity performance
  • Activities are placed within a patients range of
    comprehension and control.

6
Statement of Risk Safety risk Risk due to
inability to communicate
Link Dx to cognitive status ? What Dx is
responsible for cognitive change? Consider
cognition as a barrier to functional progress
7
The Cognitive - Communication Hierarchy
8
Development of a Functional Communication Outcome
  • Consider how communication / language (auditory
    processing, auditory, gestural reading
    comprehension, verbal, written gestural
    expression) are impacted via cognitive skills
  • Consider assessment of visual versus auditory
    attention, concentration, and memory
  • Consider preserved skills (procedural memory,
    reading comprehension, written expression) to
    compensate for weaknesses
  • Consider assessment amelioration of sensory
    deficits

9
KEY RELATIONSHIP
  • Dementia related behaviors are a call for
  • Comfort
  • Communication
  • Movement

10
Task Analysis Clinical Reasoning
  • Analysis of Task Analysis of Behavior

11
THE CUEING HIERARCHY
  • MODALITY 
  • STRENGTH 
  • WEAKNESS
  • FLEXIBILITY
  • NONSPECIFIC
  • SPECIFIC

12
Relocation to a LTC FacilityChanges and
Adaptive Challenges
  • New setting
  • Loss of possessions
  • Lack of privacy
  • New communication partners
  • Role of resident / patient
  • Communication styles differ
  • Rules of successful LTC living differ from
    outside world
  • Fears and anxieties emerge about
  • LTC as a prelude to death failing health
    institutionalization loss of decision making
    increased dependence loss of finances
    separation from loved ones feelings of
    rejection incompetence patient role
  • Adapted from Enhancing Communication Services in
    Extended Care Settings

13
Cognitive Collaborative Care Pilot Study
  • 7 Randomly selected skilled nursing facilities on
    the east coast of the US
  • A collaborative programming model for cognitive
    management was implemented in the 7 facilities
  • Pilot Study Goals
  • Identify preconceived beliefs of healthcare
    providers that negatively impacted consistent
    care
  • To ameliorate these obstacles via caregiver
    education and training
  • To ascertain if positive outcomes were gained
    from the use of three, cognitive leveled tool
    kits that targeted preserved cognitive skills,
    with patients who had moderate to severe dementia
  • Positive outcome as measured by
  • Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory,
  • ASHA NOMS scores, ACL scores and Caregiver
    Assessment

14
Patient Identification Need for Skilled Rehab
Services
  • Rehab evaluation and treatment procedures would
    proceed per typical, best practice patient
    identification of need
  • Change in status
  • Risk
  • New treatment approach
  • Reasonable expectation for improvement

15
SLP Pilot Study Roles
  • SLP Assessment Tools SLUMS, Functional
    Linguistic Communication Inventory, ASHA FACS
  • Together with OT will complete the Cohen
    Mansfield Agitation Inventory
  • Functional Skills Inventory
  • Submit patient documentation from eval to
    discharge, Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory
    and the Functional Skills Inventory for analysis
  • Pre and Post Survey completion
  • Determine which tool kits and strategies are most
    effective in reducing behaviors
  • Train staff document in the patient care plan
    the recommended approaches activities (FMP)

16
OT Pilot Study Roles
  • OT Assessment Tools Allen Cognitive Level (OT
    Leather Lacing, Routine Task Inventory and/or
    Placemat Test)
  • Together with SLP will complete the Cohen
    Mansfield Agitation Inventory
  • Send patient documentation from eval to
    discharge, Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory
  • Pre and Post Survey completion
  • Determine which tool kits and strategies are most
    effective in reducing behaviors
  • Train staff and document in the patient care plan
    the recommended approaches and activities (FMP)

17
Nursing and Activities Involvement
  • Charge Nurses, RNs, LPNs, CNAs, Activities
    professionals are asked to complete the Pre and
    Post Cognitive Pilot Study Survey
  • Nursing and Activities staff implement the
    cognitive tool kits as recommended via SLP and /
    or OT staff
  • Use of the recommended items for the moderate to
    severely cognitively impaired patients was
    similar to implementation of a Functional
    Maintenance Program upon discharged from Rehab
  • The cognitive tool kits serve as another
    treatment procedure to reduce patient agitation,
    anxiety and increase attention and communication
    with staff

18
Pre-Implementation Survey
  • Use scale strongly disagree, disagree, neutral,
    agree, strongly agree
  •  Patients with moderate to severe dementia are
    managed effectively consistently in this
    facility
  • 20 SA/A, 24 N, 56 D/SD
  • Carryover of rehabilitation interventions are
    easily duplicated by non-rehab personnel in the
    facility, on all shifts
  • 20 A, 7 N, 74 D/SD
  • One shift is better than another shift in
    managing patients with moderate to severe
    dementia
  • 65 A/SA, 25 N, 10 D
  • If agreed then, Which shift is the most
    successful in management of the cognitively
    impaired patient Choices 7-3, 3/11 or 11/7
  • 7-3 96
  • 3-11 0
  • 11-7 4

19
Pre-Implementation Survey
  • Use scale strongly disagree, disagree, neutral,
    agree, strongly agree
  • Sometimes patients with moderate to severe
    dementia become agitated for no reason
  • 38 A/SA, 10 N, 53 D/SD
  • Sometimes it is acceptable to allow patients with
    moderate to severe dementia to yell for a few
    minutes
  • 33 A, 23 N, 46 D/SD
  • Medications should always be administered to
    patients with moderate to severe dementia to
    reduce maladaptive behaviors
  • 3 A, 10 N, 88 D/SD
  • There has been dementia care education
    opportunities provided at least annually in this
    facility
  • 25 A/SA, 25 N, 51 D/SD
  • Dementia is a natural part of the aging process
  • 23 A, 10 N, 68 D/SD

20
Pilot Study Rehab Nursing Assessment Tools
21
Allens Diagnostic Materials - ADM
Placemat and bookmark - two of 30 functionally
based craft assessment tools Standardized
assessment tool Offers tools for a variety of ACL
levels 3.0 and above More readily accepted by
both genders Can assess ability with partial
completion
22
Allens Diagnostic Materials - ADM
  • Leather Lacing
  • A visuomotor task
  • Provides a quick estimate of the patients
    capacity to learn.
  • Barriers include patient visual perceptual
    deficits, hand dominance, tremors, deafness,
    inability to understand directions, and
    hemiplegia
  • Standardized on both psychiatric and
    neurologically impaired populations
  • Quick, simple to administer
  • Appropriate for clients ACL 3.0 and above
  • Requires fairly adequate fine motor and visual
    abilities
  • May be perceived as female gender specific

23
Routine Task Inventory
  • Part of initial interview to determine PLOF and
    activities
  • Activity Analysis Based Cognitive Screening - RTI
  • Non standardized assessment
  • Only Allens tool to assess clients below ACL 3.0
  • Very quick, easily completed in the course of ADL
    completion
  • Requires thorough understanding of ACL levels and
    modes
  • The intrinsic importance of an activity is
    apparent when an individual engages in a task
  • Observations of performance that objectively
    describe behavior usually have the greatest
    credibility

24
Cognitive Performance Test - CPT
  • Standardized Home Management tool
  • Test encompassing functional ADL task analysis
  • Excellent tool for higher functioning clients
  • Requires specific tools and environmental set up
    to complete
  • More time/attention span required for completion
  • Developed to provide a standardized, ADL-based
    instrument for the assessment of functional
    levels
  • Focuses on the degree to which particular
    deficits in information processing impact daily
    living tasks
  • Composed of common ADL tasks, familiar and
    routine to reduce performance anxiety of
    patients with dementia, which are graded to
    correspond to the Allen Cognitive Levels

25
Distinction Between the RTI and CPT
  • RTI
  • Assumes that the therapist will incorporate this
    test along with the leather lacing tool. The tool
    is not a "stand alone test"
  • Data is gathered via by observation of functional
    tasks, interviewing the patient, and interviewing
    the caregiver
  • CPT
  • This was created as a stand alone test.
  • This test does not involve a self report or
    caregiver report to be factored in
  • A portion of the functional activities are done
    with the patient, for example, demonstration,
    unlike the RTI
  • Both tools are similar in that they use
    functional activities

26
Evaluation Assessing From Groundwork Up
  • Claudia Allen Levels
  • Level One Automatic Actions
  • Level Two Postural Actions
  • Level Three Manual Actions
  • Level Four Goal Directed Activity
  • Level Five Independent Learning Activities
  • Level Six Planned Activities

27
Functional Linguistic Communication Inventory
FLCI
  • Evaluation of functional communication
  • Recommended for patients with moderate severe
    cognitive loss
  • Ease of administration 30 minutes
  • Advantages disadvantages
  • Correlates well w/ Cognitive Severity Scale
  • Subtests include
  • Greeting and naming - Answering questions
  • Writing - Sign comprehension
  • Object-to picture matching - Word reading
    comprehension
  • Following commands
  • Pantomime, gesture and conversation

28
ASHA FACS
  • Pre-requisite 3 informal communicative contacts
    w/ patient
  • Survey 7 - Point scale of the patients level of
    communicative independence defined by the need
    for assistance and / or prompting by another
    person.
  • Assessment domains include
  • Social Communication
  • Communication of Basic Needs
  • Reading / Writing / Number Concepts
  • Daily Planning

29
Saint Louis University Mental Status
Examination (SLUMS)
  • Consists of 11 questions
  • Score range 0 to 30
  • High School Educationlt High School
    Education
  • 27-30 Normal 20-30
  • 20-26 MCI 15-19
  • 1-19 Dementia 1-14

30
Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory
  • A 7 point rating scale for assessing the
    frequency with which people show certain
    behaviors
  • 29 descriptors rated 1-7 during a 2 week period
  • Patients scored pre and post tool kit
    implementation
  • 10-15 minutes to complete
  • Training manual can be accessed via the author
  • Research Institute on Aging at the Hebrew Home of
    Greater Washington
  • http//www.researchinstituteonaging.org
  • Hcsjcm_at_gwumc.edu
  • Cohen-mansfield_at_hebrew-home.org

31
Personal History Interview
  • Establish
  • Occupational history
  • Experiences
  • Patterns of daily living
  • Interests
  • Values
  • Needs

32
Personal History Interview
  • By developing the personal history you can
    enhance
  • Treatment Approach
  • Patient/Therapist Relationship
  • Family/Caregiver training
  • Successful environmental adaptations
  • Behavioral Approaches
  • Treatment Outcomes

33
Validation Therapy
  • Developed by Naomi Feil between 1963-1980
  • VT helps disoriented people reduce stress,
    enhance dignity and increase happiness. VTs
    objective is to restore dignity to the elderly,
    teach empathy, and to show alternatives to
    pharmacological physical restraints.
  • Naomi Feil
  • Validation The acceptance of the reality and
    personal truth of anothers experience
  • An effective combo Validation and Redirection
  • Reality Orientation versus Therapeutic Lying
    versus Validation Therapy
  • Need for more controlled research studies

34
Tool Kit Inventory
  • 3 Leveled Tool Kits
  • Individualized to encompass activities
    appropriate for each patients preserved abilities
    to increase effective communication thus
    reducing behaviors
  • Tool Kits were implemented for appropriate
    patients during the Pilot Study period 45 days
  • Tool Kit categories were general ideas Rehab,
    Nursing and Activities professionals may
    interchange items based on individualized patient
    need and recommendation

35
Tool Kit Types
  • Attention Kit Moderate Cognitive Impairment
  • Exploration Kit Moderate Severe Cognitive
    Impairment
  • Relaxation Kit Severe Cognitive Impairment

36
ATTENTION KIT
  • Stickers - Coins
  • Cents Money Word Index Cards
  • Flying Gliders Planes
  • Nuts and Bolts
  • Tape Measure
  • Screw Anchors - Colored
  • Dice - 5
  • Playing Cards
  • Chess Sets
  • Checkers
  • Calculators
  • Rulers
  • Crossword Puzzle Books
  • Word Search Books
  • Hanging Basket Grow Kit
  • Scissors

37
EXPLORATION KIT
  • Magazines - Assorted
  • Stickers - Geometric
  • Coloring Books and Crayons (Jumbo)
  • Stickers Sports, Animals, Rainbow, Smiles,
    Letters, Hearts
  • Pencil Boxes
  • Playdough
  • Trisonic FM Radio with earphones
  • Magnifying Glass
  • Cell Phones
  • Marbles
  • Tool Set - Toy
  • Notebooks
  • Colored Paper Notebooks
  • Velvet Art and Crayons
  • Shopping List Pads
  • Sorting Activities
  • Wooden puzzles
  • Flower Braclet Set (sorting)
  • Poker Chips in Rolls - 4 Colors
  • Chip Tray(For sorting)

38
RELAXATION KIT
  • Bubble Ball Jr.
  • Textured Footballs
  • Handballs - Glitter
  • Textured Plastic Bat with Rope
  • Baby Bottles
  • Fur Real Pet Dogs and Birds
  • Newborn Baby Alive Sip Snooze
  • American Flags

39
Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • How many cognitively impaired patients did you
    evaluate during the pilot period (6 weeks)?
  • Less than 5 94
  • 5-10 6.3
  • More than 10 0

40
Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • If a patient was not appropriate for the
    Cognitive Tool Kit select why
  • Too high level 12.5
  • Too low level 43.8
  • Other 43.8
  • Impaired Arousal, Vision, no Dementia Dx, DC to
    hospital, Staff had difficulty following through,
    Manager, dont eval, dont treat

41
Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • How many patients did you recommend the cognitive
    tool kit interventions for?
  • 25 total for 7 facilities in 6 week period

42
Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • Select the type of cueing you found patients in
    the Pilot responded best to
  • Visual 87.5
  • Auditory 62.5
  • Tactile 62.5

43
Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • Did your patients demonstrate a preserved
    strength that you could identify?
  • Yes 93.8
  • Increased attention to task and conversation,
    communication of positive emotion, decreased
    anxiety,
  • No 6.3

44
Nursing and Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • Identify your level of agreement with the
    following statements.
  • Understanding the appropriate use of the
    prescribed tool kits was easily conveyed to
    caregivers across all shifts.
  • 57A/SA, 30N, 9D, 9SD
  • The prescribed tool kits were easily used by
    non-rehabilitation personnel.
  • 57A/SA, 26N, 17D
  • Negative and/or socially inappropriate behaviors
    of patients with moderate to severe dementia were
    significantly reduced with the use of the
    prescribed tool kits.
  • 43A/SA, 43N, 13D

45
Nursing and Rehab Post Pilot Survey Analysis
  • Identify your level of agreement with the
    following statements.
  • There was an improvement in rehabilitation
    intervention carryover regarding patients with
    moderate to severe dementia, across all shifts.
  • 44A/SA, 52N, 4D
  • Management of behaviors of patients with moderate
    to severe dementia improved as a direct result of
    the use of the prescribed tool kits.
  • 61A/SA, 35N, 4D
  • I would recommend using the types of tool kits as
    a means of managing patients with moderate to
    severe dementia.
  • 83A, 17N, 0D
  • The cognitive pilot study and its tool kits
    strengthened the nursing - rehab relationship to
    benefit the cognitively impaired patient.
  • 47A, 26N, 22D, 4SD

46
FMP- A.K.A. staff / family / caregiver training
education
  • How do I write a FMP?
  • Documentation cannot be a hindrance
  • Therapist recommendations formulated from an eval
    exist as a FMP?
  • List of recommendations FMP
  • Recommendations are a hypothesis/theory
  • Evaluation process is needed to yield
    recommendations that can be proven to be
    successful and therefore carried out on a long
    term basis via caregivers

47
FMP ESTABLISHMENT VS. IMPLEMENTATION
  • Once caregivers are accurately trained,
    implementation begins skilled Rx ends.
  • Discharge to Restorative or FMP
  • Facilitates a continuum of care
  • Maximizes the outcome of skilled intervention

48
DEVELOPMENT OF AN FMP
  • ASK ...
  • What do I want skilled treatment to accomplish?
  • What do I want the resident to be able to do?
  • Is the goal to accomplish Rx tasks with some
    degree of independence or with a certain amount /
    type of assistance?
  • Are there individualized strategies that can be
    useful in attaining or approaching goals that I
    can instruct a caregiver in order to maintain
    safety and quality of life?

49
RECOMMENDATIONS TO STAFF FAMILY / CAREGIVERS
  • Return demonstration
  • Sign-off documentation
  • Provides accountability and credit for attendance
    / performance
  • Enhances the importance of a team effort - from
    CNA to Rehab Manager
  • Written recommendations on Write on Cling Sheets,
    CAN care belts, card, folders in patient room
  • KNOW Nursing Assistant Competency for feeding and
    facility specific training modes (i.e. NEO
    annually) for basic individualized techniques

50
The Nursing Friendly Functional Maintenance
Program
  • First Things 1st - Establishing Repoire - SMILE
  • CNAs Learn who they are give them a reason to
    follow through
  • Hardest job in the building Nursing Assistant
  • Typical Ratio StaffPatient
  • 7-3 18
  • 3-11 112 w/ no dept head assist
  • Do you know the CNA's
  • Birthday
  • Kids Names
  • Favorite food, drink, candy

51
The Nursing Friendly Functional Maintenance
Program
  • Nursing education and input regarding FMP
  • FMP (individualized recommendations) must be
    accomplished within a realistic and appropriate
    time frame
  • Rehab awareness FMP time for completion
  • Consider time of day for optimal implementation
  • Time of most need make the most impact
  • Too long?
  • Try to combine w/ a functional skill / routine
  • Ask Yourself and Nursing Is this feasible?
  • Positive attitude
  • Team player approach

52
7 Facilities Follow up
  • Feedback from facilities regarding the continued
    use of tool kits and their perceived efficacy
  • Development of patient individualized kits using
    ideas from the main kits (use of large print
    items)
  • Use of patient specific lifetime props
  • Will use tool kit if appropriate -- some items
    not extremely helpful but that is patient need
    dependent anyway
  • Biggest problem is getting other department to
    have time to use items and participate
  • Activities reports that they are using the items
    as set up by SLP with the patients that we worked
    with
  • Biggest barrier is time constraints and
    familiarity with rehab scope of practice

53
Pilot Study Feedback Future Directions
  • Charge Nurse LPN I think that as the use of the
    kits become more of the norm, they will be even
    more effective.
  • How does Rehab assist in follow up from
    individualized patient recommendations after
    discharge?
  • How do we to facilitate and maintain carryover
    between shifts?
  • Proposed follow-up study How to more
    effectively integrate rehab techniques with
    personal meaning across the healthcare spectrum
    in the management of patients with moderate to
    severe dementia

54
The environments in which we live, work, and
play have profound effects upon us. The people,
objects, and events in these environments must
arouse us enough to avoid boredom, but not so
much as to cause extreme anxiety. The
performance demands made upon us by our
environments must fit with our skills and
competencies if we are to do well. They must
match our values and interests as well, if we are
to feel satisfied. Roann Barris
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