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Specialist mental health consultation for depression in Australian aged care residents with dementia: a cluster randomized trial

Authors

McSweeney, Kate, Jeffreys, Aimee, Griffith, Joanne, Plakiotis, Chris, Kharsas, Renee, O'Connor, Daniel W.

Journal

International Journal Of Geriatric Psychiatry, Volume: 27, No.: 11, Pages.: 1163-1171

Year of Publication

2012

Abstract

Objective: This cluster randomized controlled trial sought to determine whether multidisciplinary specialist mental health consultation was more effective than care as usual in treating the depression of aged care residents with dementia.; Methods: Three hundred and eighty nine aged care residents were screened for dementia and major depression. Forty four were ultimately included in the intervention sample, selected from 20 aged care facilities located in Melbourne, Australia. Facilities were randomly allocated to an intervention condition involving the provision of multidisciplinary specialist consultation regarding the best-practice management of depression in dementia, or to a care as usual condition. Consultations involved individually tailored medical and psychosocial recommendations provided to care staff and general practitioners. All residents participated in a comprehensive pre-intervention diagnostic assessment, including the administration of the Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia. This assessment was repeated approximately 15 weeks post-intervention by a rater blind to study condition.; Results: Multidisciplinary specialist mental health consultation was significantly more effective than care as usual in treating the clinical depression of aged care residents with dementia (p < 0.05, partial η(2)  = 0.16). At follow-up, the mean Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia score for the intervention group was 9.47, compared with 14.23 for the control group. In addition, 77% of the intervention group no longer met criteria for major depression.; Conclusions: The results of this study suggest that the psychosocial and medical management of depressed aged care residents can be improved by increasing access to specialist mental health consultation.; Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Bibtex Citation

@article{McSweeney_2012, doi = {10.1002/gps.3762}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gps.3762}, year = 2012, month = {feb}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, volume = {27}, number = {11}, pages = {1163--1171}, author = {Kate McSweeney and Aimee Jeffreys and Joanne Griffith and Chris Plakiotis and Renee Kharsas and Daniel W. O{textquotesingle}Connor}, title = {Specialist mental health consultation for depression in Australian aged care residents with dementia: a cluster randomized trial}, journal = {Int J Geriatr Psychiatry} }

Keywords

advice, aged, aged, 80 and over, analysis of variance, and, australia, care, dementia, depressive disorder, diagnosis, female, from, given, gps, health services for the aged, health services research, humans, male, medical, mental health services, nursing homes, organization administration, outcome assessment (health care), psychology, referral and consultation, specialists, specialization, staff, standards, tailored, therapy, to

Countries of Study

Australia

Types of Dementia

Dementia (general / unspecified)

Types of Study

Randomised Controlled Trial

Type of Outcomes

Depression and Anxiety

Settings

Long Term Residential Care without medically trained staff

Type of Interventions

Workforce oriented interventions

Workforce Interventions

Other