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conferenceseries

.com

Volume 7, Issue 6 (Suppl)

J Alzheimers Dis Parkinsonism, an open access journal

ISSN: 2161-0460

Dementia 2017

October 16-18, 2017

ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE & DEMENTIA

October 16-18, 2017 | Rome, Italy

9

th

International Conference on

Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an in-home respite care program in supporting informal

caregivers of people with dementia: Design of a comparative study

Sophie Vandepitte, Nele Van Den Noortgate, Koen Putman, Sofie Verhaeghe

and

Lieven Annemans

Ghent University, Belgium

Background:

Dementia is a major public health problem with serious physical and emotional consequences for patients and

their informal caregivers. Although informal caregiving can be very satisfying, it is also a highly demanding task often leading

to substantial burden and potentially causing physical and mental problems when caregiving demands exceed resources. To

prevent caregivers from getting overburdened, it is important to support them. Preliminary evidence suggests that community-

based respite services can actually be important to alleviate caregiver burden.

Methods:

Aquasi-experimental study was designed to assess (cost)-effectiveness of an innovative in-home respite care program.

The primary outcome is caregiver burden. Secondary outcomes are: quality of life of caregivers, frequency of behavioral

problems of persons with dementia and caregivers’ reactions to them, intention to institutionalize the care-recipient, time to

nursing home placement, resource use, and willingness to pay. When the trial demonstrates a difference in outcomes, cost-

effectiveness analyses will be conducted in a separate economic evaluation plan. Finally, the model based cost-effectiveness

analyses will allow to extrapolate effects over a longer time horizon than the duration of the trial.

Discussion:

To date no well powered studies measured (cost)-effectiveness of an in-home respite care program. This trial will

help in bridging this information gap. Conclusions based on this trial can help clinicians, patient groups and policy-makers in

elaborating future directions of dementia care.

Biography

Sophie Vandepitte is currently working on her PhD at the University of Ghent, faculty of medicine and health sciences (Belgium) after graduating as Master of

Science in Health Education and Health Promotion (Magna cum laude). Her PhD research is focused on investigating the potential impact of support for informal

caregivers of persons with dementia in terms of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. During her PhD she has already published three papers in reputed journals

and serves currently as an associate editor of the Journal of Alzheimer Disease.

sophie.vandepitte@hotmail.com

Sophie Vandepitte et al., J Alzheimers Dis Parkinsonism 2017, 7:6(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2161-0460-C1-033