Optimising Medication Use along Dementia Progression: Recommendations from a Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design and Setting
2.2. Sampling and Recruitment
2.3. Ethics
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Management and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of Participants
3.2. Caregiver Burden
“Yeah, at the moment he’s not at that stage, you know, at the moment he just happily just takes them when I give them to him. But I should think further down the line that could be a problem if he needs to swallow them.”Caregiver 8, 70 years
“I think whether it’s just me getting older and more crotchety (laughs) or whether illness is developing and I think things are, it’s not medication that’s becoming more difficult, but I think life generally is.”Caregiver 5, 89 years
“No, while my memory holds out, all’s well. But of course if that starts to go, then we would need a lot more support.”Caregiver 6, 72 years
“Umm, really I am having about 10 to 12 years’ experience in this country. I work in nursing home quite a lot and people with dementia it’s, really it’s hard to give the medications, in that one stage it is very, very difficult, you know.”N1, female, 55 years
3.3. Interaction between Staff and Residents
“They get agitated, especially when they don’t know you, they don’t recognise your face. And you have to find a way to give it to them or just to come back and give it later. You have to adapt yourself to them, you know? And that’s the most difficult thing, sometimes when they get agitated and they don’t know you. You always ask for help with the permanent staff (…)”N2, female, 26 years
“Well like with Mrs. W., he’s written a letter saying if we can’t get her medication down, the GP’s aware of it, so if we can’t, we can’t, there’s no more, nothing else they can really do.”C4, female, 47 years
3.4. PLWD Autonomy and Capacity
“Anyway, I started on the tablets yesterday, one a day, but I was reading the leaflet this morning, quite, quite worrying. And what is very worrying is that in cases like (her husband), he wouldn’t be able to say to me ‘oh I’ve got ringing in my ear’ or ‘I’ve got bad stomachache’ or ‘I’m feeling dizzy’. People with dementia wouldn’t be able to tell you that.”Caregiver 1, 74 years
“Some of them, no means yes, and when they say yes, [it] means they say no, ‘I said I told you no!’ I say ‘no, you told me yes, you’re ready to take’ they say ‘no’. So it’s very challenging, but we keep going, we try to make them...more comfortable and happy.”N3, male, 48 years
3.5. Scheduling and Administration of Medications
“But I’m kind of building that into the routine because when she was having lunch at home it was easy, I just kept the tablet next to her lunch plate. So now before I leave the house to take her to her lunch club, I have to go to the kitchen and check that I haven’t forgotten anything, then I give her her tablet before I leave. So it’s just as you say, building in cues whenever we want to remember.”Caregiver 1, 60 years
“Sometimes you think it’s too many tablets or something. It’s just not easy.”Caregiver 7, 74 years
“Before you see I don’t have to give her medication, she go buy medication by herself. But now if I tell her that (pointing at blister pack) she couldn’t tell what’s [with] lunch, what’s you know, she can’t! I have to supply her, I have to give her.”Caregiver 3, 87 years
3.6. Choice of Formulation
“Now that we’re at a stage of her dementia where she maybe thinks of herself as being in her childhood a lot of the time...a lot of her mind is like the mind of herself as a child and therefore somebody putting an oestrogen pessary into you is quite distressing, it would be very distressing for a child. ‘What are they doing to me?’ it’s like abuse, it feels like abuse if you don’t understand.”Caregiver, 57 years
“Umm, inhalers, yes, because due to the level of dementia that the, they don’t understand that you have to actually inhale (inhales) deeply, and so a lot of inhalers, such as the Ventolin, they don’t get the full use, even with a Volumatic.”C1, male, 52 years
3.7. Interaction with and between Providers
“I think she (the doctor) doesn’t like me! … She is not used to me, and I am not used to her. Umm…yeah…one doctor is…umm…listening to you, the other doctor is not listening to you, so…”PLWD 1, 74 years
“But we try and see the same chap, not always possible, but the one who knows us. Because I think it’s quite important that they know the kind of medication you’re on, and they know what you’re like.”Caregiver 2, 73 years
“Yeah, he’s always there at a drop of a hat if we need him or we’re not sure. He comes and does inspections, he does, one of his staff does training with the staff and everything, he’s always there, sort of, he brings medication to us out of hours if we fax a prescription through, he’ll bring it in himself if he’s got no one to bring it in. He’s very good.”C4, female, 47 years
3.8. Information and Knowledge
“So what I have to do is sometimes give them with orange, and again, I find that a worry because I think, I know some medications you can’t take grapefruit with, so I’m thinking, does orange do the same sort of thing? But having said that, I think it’s more important that he has the tablets than worrying about the small amount of orange he’s drinking.”Caregiver 1, 74 years
“But we, we, in a week, we noticed most of our residents wasn’t able to take it or chew it and find that it was spat out somewhere else, so again, approach the doctor, and now we’re back on the Adcal dissolvable now.”C2, male, 55 years
4. Discussion
4.1. Practice and Policy Implications
- Consultation should include both the caregiver and PLWD to gather full scope of issues;
- Role of caregiver as an expert should be acknowledged;
- Confidentiality issues should be addressed at the start to ensure PLWD’s autonomy is respected;
- Content is dynamic and would need to change along dementia progression to adapt to changes in medication use and the PLWD and caregivers’ needs, such as facilitating transition in care in the early stages, assessing swallowing difficulties, and challenging behaviour in later stages;
- In the beginning, they should try to establish an informal arrangement between the caregiver and PLWD about the PLWD’s preferences for medications and formulations to anticipate future changes in treatment. This agreed medication plan should be updated along the trajectory and include:
- ○
- Medications desired by the PLWD, such as prescribed or when needed (e.g., pain relief);
- ○
- Preferences when taking medications, such as with/without food, to assist administration if required;
- ○
- Preferences and acceptability of certain formulations (tablets, capsules, liquids, patches, creams, etc.);
- HCPs may not be recognising and assessing swallowing difficulties in older people [31]. Asking about behaviour when administering medications or issues with certain formulations may indicate the presence of swallowing difficulties and therefore require an assessment. In later consultations with further cognitive decline, the GP may assess swallowing difficulties and accordingly refer to a specialist; and
- Assessment of suitability of formulations and route of administration is necessary.
- Involving PLWD in decisions about changes or additions to their medication regimen and explaining why;
- Respecting their need for independence by providing subtle supervision of medication taking and following their preferences for how medications are administered (such as placing all the tablets in their hands or on the table for them to take one at a time);
- Providing them with choices of drinks to take with the medications; and
- Respecting their decision to take their medications at another time but still endeavouring to approach using friendly language when they refuse medications.
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PLWD (n = 10) * | Family Caregivers (n = 11) * | |
---|---|---|
Age (mean (range)) | 80.6 (72–89) | 65.8 (57–89) |
Gender (female) | 6 | 6 |
Relationship to PLWD | ||
Daughter | - | 2 |
Spouse (wife) | - | 4 |
Spouse (husband) | - | 5 |
Approximate severity of dementia | ||
Mild | 4 | - |
Moderate-severe | 3 | - |
Severe | 3 | - |
Carers (n = 5) | Nurses (n = 3) | |
---|---|---|
Age (mean (range)) | 44.4 (0–55) | 43 (26–55) |
Gender (male) | 3 | 1 |
Job Title | ||
Residential care/unit manager | 3 | - |
Senior carer | 2 | - |
Nurse | - | 3 |
Years working | ||
Less than 5 | - | 2 |
5–9 | 2 | - |
10–20 | 1 | - |
21–30 | 1 | - |
More than 30 | 1 | 1 |
Type of care home | ||
Residential | 4 | - |
Mixed | 1 | - |
Nursing | - | 3 |
Theme | Community Setting | Care-Home Setting | Further Issues Regarding Progression |
---|---|---|---|
Caregiver burden |
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| Transition from self to caregiver-led care:
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Interaction between staff and residents | _ |
| Behaviour changes:
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PLWD autonomy and capacity |
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| Decline in cognition and communication:
|
Scheduling and administration of medications |
|
| Increase in number and variety of medication and complexity of regimen:
|
Choice of formulation |
|
| Development of swallowing difficulties:
|
Interactions with and between providers |
|
|
|
Information and knowledge |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Alsaeed, D.; Orlu, M.; Smith, F. Optimising Medication Use along Dementia Progression: Recommendations from a Qualitative Study. Healthcare 2021, 9, 982. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9080982
Alsaeed D, Orlu M, Smith F. Optimising Medication Use along Dementia Progression: Recommendations from a Qualitative Study. Healthcare. 2021; 9(8):982. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9080982
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlsaeed, Dalal, Mine Orlu, and Felicity Smith. 2021. "Optimising Medication Use along Dementia Progression: Recommendations from a Qualitative Study" Healthcare 9, no. 8: 982. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9080982
APA StyleAlsaeed, D., Orlu, M., & Smith, F. (2021). Optimising Medication Use along Dementia Progression: Recommendations from a Qualitative Study. Healthcare, 9(8), 982. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9080982