Abstract

Globally, the number of people with dementia who have palliative care needs will increase fourfold over the next 40 years. The Empowering Better End-of-Life Dementia Care (EMBED-Care) Programme aims to deliver a step change in care through a large sequential study, spanning multiple work streams. We will use mixed methods across settings where people with dementia live and die: their own homes, care homes, and hospitals. Beginning with policy syntheses and reviews of interventions, we will develop a conceptual framework and underpinning theory of change. We will use linked data sets to explore current service use, care transitions, and inequalities and predict future need for end-of-life dementia care. Longitudinal cohort studies of people with dementia (including young onset and prion dementias) and their carers will describe care transitions, quality of life, symptoms, formal and informal care provision, and costs. Data will be synthesised, underpinned by the Knowledge-to-Action Implementation Framework, to design a novel complex intervention to support assessment, decision making, and communication between patients, carers, and inter-professional teams. This will be feasibility and pilot tested in UK settings. Patient and public involvement and engagement, innovative work with artists, policymakers, and third sector organisations are embedded to drive impact. We will build research capacity and develop an international network for excellence in dementia palliative care. EMBED-Care will help us understand current and future need, develop novel cost-effective care innovations, build research capacity, and promote international collaborations in research and practice to ensure people live and die well with dementia.

Highlights

  • There are no UK studies of palliative care need in those with early-stage or moderate dementia who may be dying from other life limiting diseases or co-morbidities, which have different profiles of symptoms and carer experiences, compared with those dying from advanced dementia, or in people with young onset and rapidly progressive dementias

  • We developed an understanding of integration,[32] facilitators and barriers to good dementia palliative care,[33] and guidance for evaluation of regional health care strategies and policies.[34]

  • The EMBED-Care Programme will add to our existing knowledge and build on this work, developing a complex intervention based on our research to identify unmet needs using IPOS-Dem and providing practitioners with resources to inform clinical decision making, communication, and management of these needs

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Summary

Objectives

The number of people with dementia who have palliative care needs will increase fourfold over the 40 years. Society Junior Fellowship; Marie Curie, Grant/ Award Number: MCCC-FCO-16-U; Cicely Saunders International; National Institute for Health Research; ESRC assessment, decision making, and communication between patients, carers, and interprofessional teams. This will be feasibility and pilot tested in UK settings. Conclusions: EMBED-Care will help us understand current and future need, develop novel cost-effective care innovations, build research capacity, and promote international collaborations in research and practice to ensure people live and die well with dementia. KEYWORDS dementia, end-of-life care, family caregivers, health economics, health services research, implementation science, palliative care, policy, quality of life, symptom assessment

| INTRODUCTION
Key points
| AIMS AND OBJECTIVES
| METHODS
| Research methods
Main Methods
15. Feasibility and pilot-tested intervention
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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