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Browsing by Author "Han, Changsu (8407209300)"

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    Publication
    Development of an international schedule for the assessment and staging of care for dementia
    (2015)
    Semrau, Maya (51664158900)
    ;
    Burns, Alistair (35451022300)
    ;
    Djukic-Dejanovic, Slavica (36055709300)
    ;
    Eraslan, Defne (8608469700)
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    Han, Changsu (8407209300)
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    Lecic-Tosevski, Dusica (6602315043)
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    Lobo, Antonio (7102068584)
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    Mihai, Adriana (23474301400)
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    Morris, Julie (56493700800)
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    Palumbo, Claudia (55869612000)
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    Robert, Philippe (57213313654)
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    Stiens, Gerthild (6602670539)
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    Stoppe, Gabriela (7006578470)
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    Volpe, Umberto (55933795400)
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    Olde Rikkert, Marcel (57026404500)
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    Sartorius, Norman (7102159482)
    Background: A reliable and valid global staging scale has been lacking within dementia care. Objective: To develop an easy-to-use multi-dimensional clinical staging schedule for dementia. Methods: The schedule was developed through: i) Two series of focus groups (40 and 48 participants, respectively) in Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and UK with a multi-disciplinary group of professionals working within dementia care, to assess the need for a dementia-staging tool and to obtain suggestions on its design and characteristics; ii) A pilot-study over three rounds to test inter-rater reliability of the newly developed schedule using written case histories, with five members of the project's steering committee and 27 of their colleagues from Netherlands, France, and Spain as participants; and iii) A field-study to test the schedule's inter-rater reliability in clinical practice in France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Turkey, South Korea, Romania, and Serbia, which included 209 dementia patients and 217 of their caregivers as participants. Results: Focus group participants indicated a clear need for a culture-fair international dementia staging scale and reached consensus on face validity and content validity. Accordingly, the schedule has been composed of seven dimensions including behavioral, cognitive, physical, functional, social, and care aspects. Overall, the schedule showed adequate face validity, content validity, and inter-rater reliability; in the nine field-sites, intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs; absolute agreement) for individual dimensions ranged between 0.38 and 1.0, with 84.4% of ICCs over 0.7. ICCs for total sum scores ranged between 0.89 and 0.99 in the nine field-sites. Conclusion: The IDEAL schedule looks promising as tool for the clinical and social management of people with dementia globally, though further reliability and validity testing is needed. © 2015 - IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.
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    Publication
    Development of an international schedule for the assessment and staging of care for dementia
    (2015)
    Semrau, Maya (51664158900)
    ;
    Burns, Alistair (35451022300)
    ;
    Djukic-Dejanovic, Slavica (36055709300)
    ;
    Eraslan, Defne (8608469700)
    ;
    Han, Changsu (8407209300)
    ;
    Lecic-Tosevski, Dusica (6602315043)
    ;
    Lobo, Antonio (7102068584)
    ;
    Mihai, Adriana (23474301400)
    ;
    Morris, Julie (56493700800)
    ;
    Palumbo, Claudia (55869612000)
    ;
    Robert, Philippe (57213313654)
    ;
    Stiens, Gerthild (6602670539)
    ;
    Stoppe, Gabriela (7006578470)
    ;
    Volpe, Umberto (55933795400)
    ;
    Olde Rikkert, Marcel (57026404500)
    ;
    Sartorius, Norman (7102159482)
    Background: A reliable and valid global staging scale has been lacking within dementia care. Objective: To develop an easy-to-use multi-dimensional clinical staging schedule for dementia. Methods: The schedule was developed through: i) Two series of focus groups (40 and 48 participants, respectively) in Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, and UK with a multi-disciplinary group of professionals working within dementia care, to assess the need for a dementia-staging tool and to obtain suggestions on its design and characteristics; ii) A pilot-study over three rounds to test inter-rater reliability of the newly developed schedule using written case histories, with five members of the project's steering committee and 27 of their colleagues from Netherlands, France, and Spain as participants; and iii) A field-study to test the schedule's inter-rater reliability in clinical practice in France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Turkey, South Korea, Romania, and Serbia, which included 209 dementia patients and 217 of their caregivers as participants. Results: Focus group participants indicated a clear need for a culture-fair international dementia staging scale and reached consensus on face validity and content validity. Accordingly, the schedule has been composed of seven dimensions including behavioral, cognitive, physical, functional, social, and care aspects. Overall, the schedule showed adequate face validity, content validity, and inter-rater reliability; in the nine field-sites, intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs; absolute agreement) for individual dimensions ranged between 0.38 and 1.0, with 84.4% of ICCs over 0.7. ICCs for total sum scores ranged between 0.89 and 0.99 in the nine field-sites. Conclusion: The IDEAL schedule looks promising as tool for the clinical and social management of people with dementia globally, though further reliability and validity testing is needed. © 2015 - IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.
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    Publication
    Pathways to care for people with dementia: An international multicentre study
    (2020)
    Volpe, Umberto (55933795400)
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    Amin, Hania (57194499555)
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    Ayinde, Olatunde O. (55762678500)
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    Burns, Alistair (35451022300)
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    Chan, Wai Chi (16400525900)
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    David, Renaud (23090144700)
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    Dejanovic, Slavica Djukic (22933458200)
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    Djokic, Gorica (57203752725)
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    Eraslan, Defne (8608469700)
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    Fischer, Giulia A.L. (57212193982)
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    Gracia-García, Patricia (25647391700)
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    Hamdani, Syed Usman (56019635800)
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    Han, Changsu (8407209300)
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    Jafri, Hussain (7004620725)
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    Kallivayalil, Roy A. (16480651300)
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    Kriekaart, Roderick Leonard (57193122549)
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    Kua, Ee Heok (7006748699)
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    Lam, Linda C.W. (7201984627)
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    Lecic-Tosevski, Dusica (6602315043)
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    Leroi, Iracema (15757531500)
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    Lobo, Antonio (57211735677)
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    Mihai, Adriana (23474301400)
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    Minhas, Fareed Aslam (12803580900)
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    Mistry, Heena (58451851000)
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    Ogundele, Afolakemi T. (56780032200)
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    Olde Rikkert, Marcel G.M. (57026404500)
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    Olivera, Javier (51864251100)
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    Palumbo, Claudia (55869612000)
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    Parker, Angela (57209293420)
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    Pejuskovic, Bojana (57212194956)
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    Riese, Florian (54403496200)
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    Robert, Philippe (57213313654)
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    Semrau, Maya (51664158900)
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    Stoppe, Gabriela (7006578470)
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    Sudhakar, Sanu (57201660993)
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    Tirintica, Andreea Raluca (57204951548)
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    Tofique, Sehrish (57212197184)
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    Tsoi, Chris (24923651900)
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    Wolski, Lucas (57202005846)
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    Yalug, Irem (14627750100)
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    Wang, Huali (7501749505)
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    Yu, Xin (35104208800)
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    Sartorius, Norman (7102159482)
    Objective: The aim of the present study was to characterize the clinical pathways that people with dementia (PwD) in different countries follow to reach specialized dementia care. Methods: We recruited 548 consecutive clinical attendees with a standardized diagnosis of dementia, in 19 specialized public centres for dementia care in 15 countries. The WHO “encounter form,” a standardized schedule that enables data concerning basic socio-demographic, clinical, and pathways data to be gathered, was completed for each participant. Results: The median time from the appearance of the first symptoms to the first contact with specialist dementia care was 56 weeks. The primary point of access to care was the general practitioners (55.8%). Psychiatrists, geriatricians, and neurologists represented the most important second point of access. In about a third of cases, PwD were prescribed psychotropic drugs (mostly antidepressants and tranquillizers). Psychosocial interventions (such as psychological counselling, psychotherapy, and practical advice) were delivered in less than 3% of situations. The analyses of the “pathways diagram” revealed that the path of PwD to receiving care is complex and diverse across countries and that there are important barriers to clinical care. Conclusions: The study of pathways followed by PwD to reach specialized care has implications for the subsequent course and the outcome of dementia. Insights into local differences in the clinical presentations and the implementation of currently available dementia care are essential to develop more tailored strategies for these patients, locally, nationally, and internationally. © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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