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    视频

    Chronic disease self-management support for persons with dementia, in a clinical setting

     

    Authors Ibrahim JE, Anderson LJ, MacPhail A, Lovell JJ, Davis M, Winbolt M

    Received 6 September 2016

    Accepted for publication 3 November 2016

    Published 25 January 2017 Volume 2017:10 Pages 49—58

    DOI http://doi.org/10.2147/JMDH.S121626

    Checked for plagiarism Yes

    Review by Single-blind

    Peer reviewers approved by Dr Colin Mak

    Peer reviewer comments 3

    Editor who approved publication: Professor Scott Fraser

    Abstract: The burden of chronic disease is greater in individuals with dementia, a patient group that is growing as the population is aging. The cornerstone of optimal management of chronic disease requires effective patient self-management. However, this is particularly challenging in older persons with a comorbid diagnosis of dementia. The impact of dementia on a person’s ability to self-manage his/her chronic disease (eg, diabetes mellitus or heart failure) varies according to the cognitive domain(s) affected, severity of impairment and complexity of self-care tasks. A framework is presented that describes how impairment in cognitive domains (attention and information processing, language, visuospatial ability and praxis, learning and memory and executive function) impacts on the five key processes of chronic disease self-management. Recognizing the presence of dementia in a patient with chronic disease may lead to better outcomes. Patients with dementia require individually tailored strategies that accommodate and adjust to the individual and the cognitive domains that are impaired, to optimize their capacity for self-management. Management strategies for clinicians to counter poor self-management due to differentially impaired cognitive domains are also detailed in the presented framework. Clinicians should work in collaboration with patients and care givers to assess a patient’s current capabilities, identify potential barriers to successful self-management and make efforts to adjust the provision of information according to the patient’s skill set. The increasing prevalence of age-related chronic illness along with a decline in the availability of informal caregivers calls for innovative programs to support self-management at a primary care level.
    Keywords: chronic disease, dementia, self-management, cognitive domains

     

    摘要视频链接:Chronic disease self-management support of clinicians





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