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More than a Movement Disorder: Applying Palliative Care to Parkinson's Disease and Lewy Body Dementias
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abstract
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Project Summary/Abstract: Parkinson's disease (PD), Lewy Body Dementia (LBD) and related disorders are the second most common neurodegenerative illness affecting over 1.5 million Americans and are the 14th leading cause of death in the United States. Notably, while PD is traditionally described by motor symptoms (e.g. tremor), more recent research demonstrates that nonmotor symptoms such as pain, depression, and dementia are leading causes of mortality, quality of life (QOL), nursing home placement and caregiver distress. Regarding models of care for PD and LBD, evidence suggests that care including a neurologist results in lower mortality and nursing home placement than care solely from a primary care physician. Unfortunately, there is also significant evidence that many of the needs most important to patients and family (e.g. pain, planning for the future) are poorly addressed under current care models. Palliative care is an approach to caring for individuals with serious illness that addresses multiple causes of suffering including medical symptoms, psychosocial issues and spiritual needs. While developed for cancer patients, palliative care approaches have been successfully applied in other chronic progressive illnesses. There is expanding interest in applying these principles to PD and LBD. A small but growing cadre of centers now offer outpatient palliative care for PD and LBD with mounting evidence of efficacy including a randomized trial of academic-based outpatient palliative care led by the PI. While this work is critical to forwarding this field, further work is needed to provide models that can be widely disseminated in the community where the majority of patients receive their care. The current proposal addresses this gap and builds on lessons learned our original R01 grant by assessing the effectiveness and feasibility of a novel community-based intervention that builds online learning communities around palliative care for community neurology practices and augments care for patients and family around social support communities. We hypothesize this intervention will improve patient QOL, caregiver burden and community provider career satisfaction. Our Specific Aims are to: 1) Determine the a) effectiveness and b) feasibility of a novel community- based outpatient palliative care model for PD and LBD; 2) Describe the effects of this model on patient and caregiver costs and healthcare utilization; and 3) Identify opportunities to optimize this model by: a) describing patient and caregiver characteristics associated with intervention benefits; and b) through direct patient, caregiver and provider interviews. Innovations of our approach include the use of online learning communities to implement primary palliative care with neurologists and the use of online networks to provide team-based support and peer connections to patients and families. The research is significant because it tests a potentially more efficient and effective model of providing palliative care to persons affected by PD and LBD, and, in conjunction with other work conducted by our group, will provide data relevant to patients, healthcare providers, policy makers and other stakeholders to guide future dissemination efforts in this field.
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More than a Movement Disorder: Applying Palliative Care to Parkinson's Disease and Lewy Body Dementias
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