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Tsukii N (2022) Holistic and individualized interventions for behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia. Ann Alzheimers Dement Care 6(1): 014-018. DOI: 10.17352/aadc.000023Copyright
© 2022 Tsukii N. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.Since “living well with dementia” is a concept that varies from person to person, the care provided is expected to be customized to the individual needs of each person with dementia. Support is expected to involve shared decision-making between people with dementia and their caregivers, and a comprehensive geriatric assessment within the framework of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health is expected to be conducted to help these persons with dementia realize their goals. Additionally, the Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle is expected to be regularly implemented to verify the effectiveness of the intervention. Although the disability of the individual with dementia increases as the disease progresses, it is important to support them to live positively by reducing their difficulties in daily living.
There is now a trend to encourage the medicalization of care in the name of its scientification. Regarding the management of Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia (BPSD) in particular, it is recommended to identify the symptoms and develop a method of care for those symptoms. However, care is provided not for the symptoms but for the persons themselves. This manuscript proposes to reconsider the nature of dementia care as holistic and individualized.
In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5), dementia is defined as a progressive, neurodegenerative, and cognitive disorder characterized by a marked decline in cognitive function from previous levels and impaired independence in daily living [1]. In dementia, a decline in cognitive function makes it difficult to undertake social interactions smoothly. For example, symptoms of memory impairment may include the inability to recall appointments, schedules, or previous conversations. These symptoms can interfere with the social lives of individuals with dementia. Therefore, a person with dementia requires support from others; in this regard, it is recommendable to have a good relationship with their caregivers.
One of the basic concepts of dementia care is that it is person-centered and emphasizes the relationship between the person with dementia and their caregiver [2]. Person-centered care ensures that the needs, preferences, and values of the person with dementia guide the clinical decision-making and that care is provided in a respectful and responsive manner [2]. In other words, dementia care is about supporting a person with dementia to “live better”. However, such support does not mean that the well-being of the caregiver is sacrificed. “Living well” may have different meanings for each individual, and this diversity is expected to be respected. Therefore, caregivers are expected to provide customized support for people with dementia according to the disease progression. Further, positive interaction between persons with dementia and their caregivers is desirable in order to improve the Quality of Life (QOL) of both parties [3]. If dementia care is not beneficial to persons with dementia and their caregivers, in the long run, it can lead to the deterioration of relationships and increase the burden of care for caregivers.
To live well every day with dementia, it is desirable that persons with dementia share the decision-making process with caregivers on providing support to protect their dignity and to stabilize the relationships with those around them. After the onset of dementia, even family members may find it difficult to communicate with the person with dementia. It has been reported that sharing hobbies can help stabilize the relationship between persons with dementia and family members, reduce the BPSD, shorten the families’ care time, and improve the care skills of the family members [4,5].
In addition to the ethical and emotional aspects of empathy, caregivers are expected to have significant cognitive empathy skills, which is the ability to understand the perspective of the person with dementia [6]. Cognitive empathy is important in dementia care, especially considering the factors behind the behaviors associated with cognitive decline, which make it difficult for people with dementia to communicate effectively.
BPSD is defined by the International Psychogeriatric Association (IPA) as a symptom of disturbances in perception, thought content, mood, or behavior that frequently occur in persons with dementia [7]. The specific BPSD includes psychological symptoms such as delusions, misperceptions, hallucinations, depression, and anxiety, as well as aggressive behavior, wandering, restlessness, and agitation [7]. BPSD is experienced by most people with dementia [8-10]. Caregivers often view BPSD as problematic behavior but they can be considered a sign that the needs of the person with dementia are not being met, including physical and psychological conditions, social interactions, and economic status (Figure 1). The emergence of BPSD has been associated with increased caregiver burden [11-14], decreased QOL of caregivers and persons with dementia [13,14], and caregiver burnout [15].
In medical practice, the goal of the interventions for BPSD is mainly their reduction, while in dementia care, attempts are being made to recognize BPSD from the perspective of the person with dementia (except those caused by brain degeneration, such as the association between behavioral disorders and frontal lobes in frontotemporal dementia [16] and the association between visual hallucinations and frontal and occipital lobe functions in dementia with Lewy bodies [17]). As has been emphasized earlier, highly experienced caregivers are capable to exercise cognitive empathy to try to ensure that the normal human needs of persons with dementia are met, including undertaking meaningful activities, emotional satisfaction, and social communication [18]. Meeting the BPSD needs of persons with dementia will also lead to improved QOL [19,20], indicating that BPSD and QOL are inextricably linked [21]. Caregivers are required to provide holistic care rather than focus on a single BPSD symptom. It can be inferred that meeting the needs of people with dementia through holistic care will lead to “living well with dementia”.
There are three purposes for using BPSD assessment indicators for caregivers and health care professionals. The first is to identify obstacles to living better. Caregivers may identify the needs of a person with dementia by examining the person’s words and nonverbal expressions, including facial expressions, gestures, voice, and behavior. However, this requires that caregivers have specific skills. Otherwise, caregivers can use the BPSD assessment index as a tool to evaluate the needs of the person with dementia that they have not noticed before. Second, the assessment can serve as a communication support tool to analyze the background factors that cause BPSD and to discuss how to cope with the problem among the team of formal caregivers. Third, it can be an opportunity for caregivers to reflect on their care and how it affects the improvement or worsening of symptoms.
Although assessing BPSD is useful for professional caregivers, it is not enough to assess BPSD alone; assessment from a comprehensive perspective is desirable. Therefore, Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) [22] is useful for the holistic care of people with dementia (Figure 2).
In dementia care, holistic, individualized interventions are desirable, whereas, in usual medical practice, the evidence-based standard treatment is recommended for an identified symptom.
However, even in usual medical practice, physicians and medical professionals do not paternalistically decide and implement treatment regardless of the person’s will. The physicians and medical professionals are expected to provide information based on evidence, share the information with the person, respect the person’s will, and decide the treatment policy with a Shared Decision-Making (SDM) approach [23]. In dementia care, respecting the will of the person with dementia is even more important. Since dementia care is desirable to be an intervention centered on and tailored to the person with dementia, it is desirable to undertake an SDM approach by including people with dementia, those close to them, and healthcare professionals, while respecting the person with dementia’s values and wishes and taking into consideration the current situation, balance of benefits and harms of the prescribed treatment, and other information.
Figure 3 depicts an SDM chart in the provision of dementia care by professional caregivers: the first step is to determine the goals of care together with the person with dementia through communication tailored to the person’s cognitive function. Next, the caregiver is expected to analyze the overall policy of care within the framework of the World Health Organization International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) [24]: applying the CGA assessment to the ICF framework to form a holistic image of the person with dementia (Figure 4). Furthermore, care staff is expected to practice the Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycle [25], a method of continuous improvement. In other words, they are expected to comprehensively evaluate the person with dementia using CGA, plan the care (Plan), practice the care (Do), check the effectiveness (Check), formulate improvements and countermeasures (Act), and develop new care plans (Plan) (Figure 3).
The composition of this tailor-made intervention is expected to be holistic, including maintaining residual abilities, psychological aspects, and a supportive environment, including family support [26]. In addition, as dementia progresses, the disability of the person with dementia increases, and the needs of people with dementia change depending on the disease progression as well as on their physical and psychological condition. Hence, it is necessary to provide care that meets the needs of the persons with dementia according to their situation and progression of dementia.
As mentioned above, BPSD and QOL are inextricably linked [21] and care for BPSD aims at meeting the unmet needs of persons with dementia. Therefore, it may be desirable to go one step further and more proactively ask the person with dementia directly “What makes you happy?” [27-29]. What makes a person with dementia happy (the overall goal of life) varies from one individual to another. Therefore, caregivers are desirable to support people with dementia according to their wishes considering their perspective.
This manuscript is the view of the author, who will continue to accumulate evidence in line with this view. As mentioned in the introduction, this manuscript proposes to reconsider dementia care as a holistic and individualized approach. To this end, it may be required to demonstrate the unique value of this model of care, rather than medicalizing it, by presenting evidence of its advantages in comparison with the conventional medical framework of identifying symptoms and verifying the effects of the prescribed interventions [30].
Dementia care is about “living well with dementia,” and since what makes a person with dementia feel happy varies from person to person, tailored interventions are desirable. Dementia care aims to create a relationship of mutual coexistence and reciprocity in which the person with dementia is grateful for the support ofothers and does what he or she can to help others. Even though the number of things that a person with dementia cannot do increases as the disease progresses, it is important to support that person is looking for things that they can do and live positively while receiving support from others.
The author is grateful to persons with dementia who are a source of inspiration, and Dr. Maki for supervising the manuscript.
This study was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (# 19K11432).
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