Caregiver Attitudes About Patients Told They Have Alzheimer's Disease After Truth Disclosure

Journal of Clinical Geropsychology - Tập 6 - Trang 309-313 - 2000
David L. Bachman1, Mark T. Wagner1, Michael DePalma1, Karen B. Spangengberg1, Shirley A. Hendrix1, David J. Perlman1
1Departments of Neurology and Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston

Tóm tắt

We wished to determine caregiver attitudes about telling patients they have Alzheimer's disease (AD). At a clinic visit, the patient, caregiver, and other family members were informed of the diagnosis of AD in a frank discussion. Caregivers accompanying patients to the Memory Disorders Clinic (MDC) were interviewed in a postvisit telephone survey 3–12 months after the truth disclosure visit. Of the 37 caregivers of a consecutive series of AD clinic patients we contacted, 35 agreed to the interview. Of those caregivers interviewed, 68.6% agreed that it had been a good idea to tell the patient the diagnosis, although 11.4% disagreed. 74.3% thought that the truth disclosure had not been too upsetting; 20% disagreed. Caregivers with more education were more likely to agree that patients should be informed. Neither the relationship of the caregiver to the patient, the patient's age, sex, education level, nor degree of dementia were predictive of the caregiver's attitude about informing the patient. Most Caregivers agreed with disclosing the diagnosis. Only a small group of patients were judged “very upset” after hearing the diagnosis. Even for those patients, caregivers generally felt that an honest discussion of the diagnosis had been helpful.

Tài liệu tham khảo

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