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. 2012 Jan 3;156(1 Pt 1):45-51.
doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-156-1-201201030-00008.

Advanced dementia: state of the art and priorities for the next decade

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Advanced dementia: state of the art and priorities for the next decade

Susan L Mitchell et al. Ann Intern Med. .

Abstract

Dementia is a leading cause of death in the United States. This article outlines the current understanding of advanced dementia and identifies research priorities for the next decade. Research over the past 25 years has largely focused on describing the experience of patients with advanced dementia. This work has delineated abundant opportunities for improvement, including greater recognition of advanced dementia as a terminal illness, better treatment of distressing symptoms, increased access to hospice and palliative care services, and less use of costly and aggressive treatments that may be of limited clinical benefit. Addressing those opportunities must be the overarching objective for the field in the coming decade. Priority areas include designing and testing interventions that promote high-quality, goal-directed care; health policy research to identify strategies that incentivize cost-effective and evidence-based care; implementation studies of promising interventions and policies; and further development of disease-specific outcome measures. There is great need and opportunity to improve outcomes, contain expenditures, reduce disparities, and better coordinate care for the millions of persons in the United States who have advanced dementia.

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Conflict of interest statement

Potential Conflicts of Interest: Dr. Mitchell: Grant (money to institution): National Institutes of Health. Dr. Black: Employment: Johns Hopkins University; Grant (money to institution): National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging; Royalties: DEMeasure. Dr. Ersek: Grant (money to institution): National Institutes of Health; Support to travel to meetings for the study or other purposes: National Palliative Care Research Center. Grants/grants pending: New York Department of Health, National Institutes of Health. Dr. Miller: Support for travel to meetings for the study or other purposes: National Palliative Care Research Center; Support for travel to meetings for the study or other purposes (money to institution): National Palliative Care Research Center; Grants/grants pending: Alzheimer’s Association; Grants/grants pending (money to institution): Alzheimer’s Association. Dr. Sachs: Support for travel to meetings for the study or other purposes (money to institution): National Palliative Care Research Center; Consultancy: CVS Caremark; Grants/grants pending (money to institution): National Institutes of Health, Agency for Health-care Research and Quality, Alzheimer’s Association, National Palliative Care Research Center, Retirement Research Foundation. Disclosures can also be viewed at www.acponline.org/authors/icmje/ConflictOfInterestForms.do?msNum=M11-2121.

Figures

Figure
Figure
A patient with dementia. Published with permission of Lorraine O’Rourke.

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