1 / 11

Dying and Dementia: Staff, Family and Multidisciplinary Team Concerns

Dying and Dementia: Staff, Family and Multidisciplinary Team Concerns. Dr Mary Cosgrave. Case Vignettes. Dying from Dementia Dying with Dementia and something else

Download Presentation

Dying and Dementia: Staff, Family and Multidisciplinary Team Concerns

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dying and Dementia: Staff, Family and Multidisciplinary Team Concerns Dr Mary Cosgrave

  2. Case Vignettes • Dying from Dementia • Dying with Dementia and something else • Levels of Palliative care: Palliative Care Approach, General Palliative Care interfacing with good Dementia Care, Specialist Palliative Care • Concerns of Staff, Family and MDT • Communication and Education

  3. Specific Issues • Diagnosis • Advanced plans or what (s)he would want • Admission to Care • Depression, malaise • Investigations • First trip to Accident and Emergency • Infections • Feeding • End of Life

  4. 1 F do we investigate? • F, 70 years old, long term patient in the Community • Lived with wife, started respite in St Ita’s • Became long-stay, minimal BPSD but resistive: intolerant of procedures • Pale, Hb 9.0 g/dl • WHAT DO WE DO?

  5. 2 T: do we transfer? • T 68 years old, dementia and cancer • Extremely disturbed at home: would not go to bedroom to sleep and agitated • No support services: admitted St Ita’s involuntary and transferred to long-stay • Diagnosis of metastases, increasing agitation: ? Pain. Family unhappy with Ita’s • DO WE TRANSFER?

  6. 3 G: angst • G 59 years, dx dementia after a long haul in St James’s Memory Clinic • Unusual variant: insight preserved • Uneasy from Day 1 “Will I become an incontinent?” • Three admissions for depression • 2006, admitted with agitation • STOPPED EATING: WHAT DID WE DO?

  7. 4 D: late presentation • D 66 years; lived with husband • Three of her siblings presented with AD • Husband hid her from services, very agitated by time of admission to St Ita’s • Never settled, ? In pain • Full investigations • HOW DID WE MANAGE?

  8. 5 J: “suicidal” • James: 68 year old man with advanced Parkinson’s disease with dementia, aphonia and diagnosed depression • Admitted BH, very ill, resuccitated but poor recovery. • Rehabilitation poor, needed enteral feeding • Pulled out tubes, tried to harm himself • WHAT DID WE DO?

  9. 6 M: ongoing active investigation and intervention • M, 65 year old married woman with end-stage AD on 1:4 week respite • Husband did not take advice and had PEG inserted by gastro team • Frequent problems with infections, insisted on full resuccitation for all illnesses • BECAME ACUTELY ILL. WHAT DID WE DO?

  10. Management of Cases • All had advanced dementia • Palliative Care Approach: same outlined to families, explaining likely life-span and aim to ensure quality of remaining time • Medical Advice sought for confirmation of underlying illnesses • Palliative Care advice sought for all • Specialist Palliative Care Advice obtained for those with malignancy and intractable symptoms • Communication with Families: frequent and detailed was key strategy.

  11. Recap of issues • Understanding of dementia, course, prognosis, duration. • Changing expectations, targets with disease change • Changing treatment target as appropriate • Balance of over and under investigation • Realism of health environment

More Related