Costs of dementia care constitute a great part of the total costs of care for elderly. Because the prevalence of dementia is linked to increasing age, and the number of the oldest old is rising, the costs of dementia care will increase considerably in the forthcoming decades. In this review, researc
BOOK REVIEW. The New Culture of Dementia Care
β Scribed by CATHERINE DONALDSON
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 164 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The book presents the main findings of the crosssectional phase of WHO'S collaborative study on 'Psychological Problems in General Health Care'. The collaborating centres comprised eight centres in Europe, three centres each in Asia and the Americas, and one in Africa. The health care settings chosen for the study ranged from GP practices to public and private primary health centres of varying size. Follow-up results (at three and twelve months) will be reported elsewhere. There were marked differences across centres in prevalence rates for the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) based 'psychological caseness' (ICD-10 diagnoses), the most common disorders being depression and generalized anxiety disorder. There was a clearcut effect of psychological 'caseness' on both self-and interviewer-rated disability which was independent of physical health. Psychological disorders had a strong and independent effect on health perception. Prevalence rates of ICD-10 psychological disorders vaned widely (rank orders being, however, consistent with both GHQ ratings and physicians' clinical diagnoses), ranging from 7.3% in Shanghai to 52.5% in Santiago de Chile with an average of 24% over all the centres. Prevalence rates were lowest in Asia, and highest in Europe and South America. The concordance of physicians' diagnoses with research diagnoses varied widely from 17% to 75%. Slightly less than half the patients considered to be 'psychological cases' by physicians did not fulfil ICD-10 diagnostic requirements. Concordance was higher in centres with an 'individualized care' model (physician known to patient and seeing him over time, easy access, appointment system, records kept by physician) as compared to a 'collective' or 'clinic-centered' care model
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Book reviewed in this article: Juliene G. Lipson and Suzanne L. Dibble, Eds. (2005). __Culture & Clinical Care__ (2nd ed.).
## Abstract ## Objective To determine the effects of educational interventions about dementia, directed at primary care providers (PCPs). ## Design We searched Medline, Embase, PsycInfo, Cinahl and the Cochrane library for relevant articles. Two researchers independently assessed the citations i
## Abstract ## Objective To explore why people from minority ethnic (ME) groups with dementia present later to specialist diagnostic and therapeutic dementia services. We systematically reviewed the literature exploring how and why ME people with dementia present to specialist services. ## Method