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Reviews and Editorials

Implementing post diagnostic dementia care in primary care: a mixed-methods systematic review

ORCID Icon, , , , , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 1381-1394 | Received 30 Jan 2020, Accepted 28 Aug 2020, Published online: 10 Sep 2020
 

Abstract

Objectives

Concentrating post-diagnostic dementia care in primary care may lead to better and more cost-effective care closer to home. We aimed to assess which intervention components and contextual factors may contribute to the successful delivery and implementation of primary care-led post-diagnostic dementia care.

Methods

Mixed-methods systematic review. We searched five databases (inception-March 2019) with reference list screening and citation tracking. We included studies evaluating post-diagnostic dementia care interventions where primary care had a significant role in dementia care, which assessed one or more implementation elements (acceptability, feasibility, adoption, sustainability, reach, costs, appropriateness or fidelity). Two authors independently critically appraised studies.

Results

Out of 4528 unique references, we screened 380 full texts and included 49 evaluations of services collecting implementation process data. Most services had high acceptability ratings. The most acceptable components were information provision, social and emotional support and links to community organisations. Feasibility was chiefly influenced by provider engagement and leadership, building dementia care capacity, sufficient resources/funding and collaboration. Care quality was maximised through adding capacity from a dementia-specific health professional. On the basis of limited data, costs for various primary care-led models did not substantially differ from each other.

Conclusion

A range of primary care-led dementia care models appear feasible and acceptable. Future services should: add dementia-focussed health professionals into primary care, develop primary care leadership and provide sufficient funding and collaboration opportunities. Information, community service links and social and ongoing support should be part of services. Further exploration of service reach and formalised fidelity assessment are needed.

Disclosure statement

Professor Dame Louise Robinson is in receipt of an 'NIHR Senior Investigator Award scheme’- reference number NF-SI-0616-10054. All other authors declare no conflict of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by funding from Alzheimer’s Society (grant number 331).

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