Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02396082

MIND: Care Coordination for Community-living Person With Dementia

MIND: An RCT of Care Coordination for Community-living Person With Dementia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
300 (estimated)
Sponsor
Johns Hopkins University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 120 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a 24-month, prospective, single- blind, randomized controlled trial evaluating the MIND at Home-streamlined dementia care coordination intervention (called MIND-S) in a cohort of 300 community-living persons with dementia and their family caregivers in the Greater Baltimore area. Participants receiving MIND-S will get 18 months of care coordination by an interdisciplinary team comprised of trained memory care coordinators (non-clinical), a psychiatric nurse, and geriatric psychiatrist. The intervention involves 4 key components: identification of needs and individualized care planning (persons with dementia (PWD) and care giver (CG) needs); dementia education and skill building; coordination, referral and linkage of services; and care monitoring.Participants in the comparison group will receive an initial in-home needs assessment and will be given the written results along with any recommendations for care that are indicated.

Detailed description

Over 5 million older Americans currently suffer from Alzheimer's disease and related dementias with 80% receiving care in the community by 15 million informal caregivers (CGs) providing unpaid care. Dementia is associated with high health care costs, long term care (LTC) placement, medical complications, reduced quality of life, and CG burden. Patient and family centric care models tailored to dementia that address the multidimensional aspects of dementia management, and link health and community care are understudied but may represent a promising mechanism to address the multiple and on-going needs of this growing population, reduce adverse outcomes such as premature LTC placement, and produce cost benefits. This is a definitive Phase III efficacy trial to test Maximizing Independence at Home-Streamlined (MIND-S), a home- based, care coordination intervention for community-living persons with dementia (PWD) and their family CGs that builds on pilot work. In a pilot trial, MIND at Home was successfully implemented in a diverse sample of 303 community-living individuals with memory disorders and was found to be acceptable to CGs, led to delays in time to transition from home, improved PWD quality of life, and CG time savings. The current project is a 24-month, prospective, single- blind, parallel group, randomized controlled trial evaluating MIND-S in a cohort of 300 community-living PWD and their informal CGs in the Greater Baltimore area. Participants receiving MIND-S will get up to 18 months of care coordination by an interdisciplinary team comprised of trained memory care coordinators (non-clinical), a psychiatric nurse, and geriatric psychiatrist. The intervention involves 4 key components: identification of needs and individualized care planning (PWD and CG needs); dementia education and skill building; coordination, referral and linkage of services; and care monitoring.Participants in the comparison group will receive an initial in-home needs assessment and will be given the written results along with any recommendations for care that are indicated.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMIND-S InterventionMIND at Home is a home-based, care coordination that focuses on persons with dementia living at home and their family caregivers. Its goal is to help persons age in place safely while increasing quality of life. Delivered over 18 months, MIND systematically assesses and addresses unmet care needs of persons with dementia and their caregivers which are known to be linked to poor health and quality of life outcomes, and that put people at risk for long term care placement. The needs addressed in the MIND program cover a wide range of care domains, ranging from home and medication safety, to cognitive and behavior symptoms management, meaningful activities and legal considerations. The care team made up of a memory care coordinator, nurse, and physician. Patients and families receive care coordination assistance, resource referrals, dementia care education and behavior management skills training, emotional support and problem-solving, and home safety education
OTHERAugmented Usual CareAugmented usual care consists of an initial full in-home needs assessment for dementia-related needs and a written report that identifies unmet needs and provides recommendations for care sent to the participant and the primary care physician. Augmented usual care participants also receive an Aging and Caregiver Resource Guide that includes program and contact information for several local and national aging service organizations (e.g., Alzheimer's Association, Administration on Aging, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid). This condition likely exceeds the usual level of intervention in primary care settings

Timeline

Start date
2014-08-01
Primary completion
2020-04-01
Completion
2020-04-01
First posted
2015-03-24
Last updated
2021-07-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02396082. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.