5 results on '"Wolfs, Claire"'
Search Results
2. Impact of Untimely Access to Formal Care on Costs and Quality of Life in Community Dwelling People with Dementia.
- Author
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Janssen, Niels, Handels, Ron L., Sköldunger, Anders, Woods, Bob, Jelley, Hannah, Edwards, Rhiannon Tudor, Orrell, Martin, Selbæk, Geir, Røsvik, Janne, Gonçalves-Pereira, Manuel, Marques, Maria J., Zanetti, Orazio, Portolani, Elisa, Irving, Kate, Hopper, Louise, Meyer, Gabriele, Bieber, Anja, Stephan, Astrid, Kerpershoek, Liselot, and Wolfs, Claire A.G.
- Subjects
QUALITY of life ,DEMENTIA ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL care costs ,NEEDS assessment - Abstract
Background: Access to formal care is not always timely and a better understanding on the impact of untimely access is needed.Objective: To examine, from a societal perspective, the impact of untimely access to formal care in terms of total costs and quality of life over one year in community dwelling people with dementia.Methods: Within the Actifcare study, needs, resource use, and quality of life were observed for one year in a cohort of 451 community dwelling people with dementia in 8 European countries. Untimely access to care was operationalized as having at least one unmet need for care identified by the Camberwell Assessment of Need for the Elderly (CANE) instrument. Two regression models were built for both total costs and quality of life measured by the EQ-5D-5L, one using sum of unmet needs and one using a predefined selection of need items.Results: Unmet needs were not associated with higher total costs but they were associated with a lower quality of life of people with dementia. Of all CANE items, only an unmet need for "company" was significantly related to lower total costs.Conclusion: Total costs did not seem to differ between participants with unmet and met needs. Only few associations between specific unmet needs and costs and quality of life were found. Furthermore, quality of life of people with dementia decreases when multiple unmet needs are experienced, indicating that assessing and meeting needs is important to improve quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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3. Quality of Life, Care Resource Use, and Costs of Dementia in 8 European Countries in a Cross-Sectional Cohort of the Actifcare Study.
- Author
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Handels, Ron L.H., Sköldunger, Anders, Bieber, Anja, Edwards, Rhiannon Tudor, Gonçalves-Pereira, Manuel, Hopper, Louise, Irving, Kate, Jelley, Hannah, Kerpershoek, Liselot, Marques, Maria J., Meyer, Gabriele, Michelet, Mona, Portolani, Elisa, Røsvik, Janne, Selbaek, Geir, Stephan, Astrid, de Vugt, Marjolein, Wolfs, Claire, Woods, Bob, and Zanetti, Orazio
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QUALITY of life ,DEMENTIA ,MEDICAL care use ,MEDICAL care costs ,CAREGIVERS - Abstract
Background: With 10.5 million people with dementia in Europe and $301 billion associated costs, governments face challenges organizing access to care.Objective: To examine the costs related to formal and informal care use and quality of life for people with dementia in eight European countries, and explore the association with unmet needs.Methods: Cross-sectional data from 451 persons with dementia and their informal caregivers of the Actifcare cohort study were obtained. Formal and informal care use was multiplied by country specific unit prices of services. Needs were measured using the CANE and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of the person with dementia (both self- and proxy-rated) and informal caregiver's quality of life using EQ-5D-5L, ICECAP-O, DEMQOL-U, and CarerQol utility scores. The association between costs and country, European region, and unmet needs was assessed using multi-level linear regression.Results: Self-rated EQ-5D-5L utility score was higher than proxy-rated (0.84 and 0.71, respectively). Informal caregivers' utility score was 0.84. Across eight countries annual mean costs of formal and informal care were approximately € 17,000. Unmet needs were not associated with annual costs of care, nor with proxy-rated HRQOL, but were associated with self-rated HRQOL.Conclusion: We found varying relationships between unmet needs and quality of life, and no association between unmet needs and care costs, although the results were sensitive to various factors. Future research should further investigate the relation between unmet needs, quality of life and costs to generate a better understanding of the effects of (un)timely access to care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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4. Added Prognostic Value of Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers in Predicting Decline in Memory Clinic Patients in a Prospective Cohort
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Handels, Ron L.H., primary, Joore, Manuela A., additional, Vos, Stephanie J.B., additional, Aalten, Pauline, additional, Ramakers, Inez H.G.B., additional, Rikkert, Marcel Olde, additional, Scheltens, Philip, additional, Jansen, Willemijn J., additional, Visser, Pieter-Jelle, additional, van Berckel, Bart M.N., additional, van Domburg, Peter, additional, Smid, Machiel, additional, Hoff, Erik, additional, Hoogmoed, Jan, additional, Bouwman, Femke, additional, Claassen, Jurgen, additional, Leentjens, Albert F.G., additional, Wolfs, Claire A.G., additional, Severens, Johan L., additional, and Verhey, Frans R.J., additional
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- 2016
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5. The Diagnostic and Prognostic Value of Neuropsychological Assessment in Memory Clinic Patients.
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Jansen, Willemijn J., Handels, Ron L. H., Visser, Pieter Jelle, Aalten, Pauline, Bouwman, Femke, Claassen, Jurgen, van Domburg, Peter, Hoff, Erik, Hoogmoed, Jan, Leentjens, Albert F. G., Rikkert, Marcel Olde, Oleksik, Ania M., Smid, Machiel, Scheltens, Philip, Wolfs, Claire, Verhey, Frans, and Ramakers, Inez H. G. B.
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NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,MEMORY disorders ,NEUROBEHAVIORAL disorders ,PROGNOSIS ,CLINICAL neuropsychology ,PATIENTS ,DIAGNOSIS ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,COGNITION disorders ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DIGITAL image processing ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Neuropsychological testing has long been embedded in daily clinical practice at memory clinics but the added value of a complete neuropsychological assessment (NPA) to standard clinical evaluation is unknown.Objective: To evaluate the added diagnostic and prognostic value of NPA to clinical evaluation only in memory clinic patients.Methods: In 221 memory clinic patients of a prospective cohort study, clinical experts diagnosed clinical syndrome (subjective cognitive impairment (SCI), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or dementia) and etiology (Alzheimer's disease (AD) or no AD), and provided a prognosis of disease course (decline or no decline) before and after results of NPA were made available. The reference standard was a panel consensus based on all clinical information at baseline and up to 2 follow-up assessments.Results: With NPA data available, clinicians changed their initial syndromal diagnosis in 22% of patients, and the etiological diagnosis as well as the prognosis in 15%. This led to an increase in correctly classified cases of 18% for syndromal diagnosis, 5% for etiological diagnosis, and 1% for prognosis. NPA data resulted in the largest improvement in patients initially classified as SCI (syndrome: 93.3% (n = 14) correctly reclassified, etiology: net reclassification improvement [NRI] = 0.61, prognosis: NRI = 0.13) or MCI (syndrome: 89.3% (n = 23) correctly reclassified, etiology: NRI = 0.17, prognosis: NRI = 0.14), while there was no improvement in patients with dementia (syndrome: 100% (n = 1) correctly reclassified, etiology: NRI = -0.05, prognosis: NRI = -0.06). Overall, inclusion of NPA in the diagnostic process increased confidence in all diagnoses with 6-7%.Conclusion: Administration of a complete NPA after standard clinical evaluation has added value for diagnosing cognitive syndrome and its underlying etiology in patients regarded as non-demented based on the first clinical impression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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