The Cleveland Alzheimer's Managed Care Demonstration: Outcomes After 12 Months of Implementation.

Category Primary study
JournalThe Gerontologist
Year 2003

This article is included in 10 Systematic reviews Systematic reviews (10 references) 1 Broad synthesis Broad syntheses (1 reference)

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This demonstration evaluates the effects of integrating Alzheimer's Association care consultation service with health care services offered by a large managed care system. The primary hypothesis is that Association care consultation will decrease service utilization, increase satisfaction with managed care, and decrease caregiver depression and care-related strain. Secondary modifying-effects hypotheses posit that the effects of the intervention will be intensified when patients have not received a firm dementia diagnosis, patients have more severe memory problems, caregivers use other Association services in tandem with care consultation, and caregivers are not patients' spouses. The demonstration is a randomized trial that examines outcomes after a 12-month study period. Interview data from 157 primary family caregivers are combined with data abstracted from medical/administrative records.

RESULTS:

Support for the primary hypothesis is found for selected, but not all, service utilization outcomes and for caregiver depression. Care consultation delivered within a partnership between a managed care health system and an Alzheimer's Association is a promising strategy for improving selected outcomes for patients with dementia and their caregivers. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 53db451e3998838f4920cf47ea06e4875c322896
First added on: Sep 24, 2012