Hospice Use Actually Reduces Depression for Surviving Spouse (Video)
Hospice Use Actually Reduces Depression for Surviving Spouse (Video)
People with Depression May Be More Likely to Develop ParkinsonÛªs Disease (Video)
People with Depression May Be More Likely to Develop ParkinsonÛªs Disease (Video)
Compound in Green Tea Plus Exercise Can Slow, Reverse AlzheimerÛªs (Video)
Compound in Green Tea Plus Exercise Can Slow, Reverse AlzheimerÛªs (Video)
Hospice Use Actually Reduces Depression for Surviving Spouse
Hospice Use Actually Reduces Depression for Surviving Spouse While most surviving spouses had more depression symptoms following the death of their partner regardless of hospice use, researchers found a modest reduction in depressive symptoms among some surviving spouses of hospice users compared with nonhospice users, according to an article published online by JAMA Internal Medicine. The Institute of MedicineÛªs report on improving the quality of care near the end of life highlights the need for supporting family caregivers. Core components of high-quality hospice care include counseling services for family members before and after the patientÛªs death, according to study background. Katherine A. Ornstein, Ph.D., M.P.H., of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, and coauthors used data from a national sample to examine the effect of hospice use on depressive symptoms in surviving spouses, especially those spouses identified as primary caregivers. The authors linked data from the Health and Retirement Study to Medicare claims. Participants included 1,016 patient and their surviving spouses. Depression scores reflecting symptom severity were measured up to two years after death. Study results show that 28.2 percent of spouses of hospice users had improved depression scores compared with 21.7 percent of spouses whose partners didnÛªt use hospice. Among the 662 spouses who were primary caregivers, 27.3 percent of the spouses of hospice users had improved depression scores compared with 20.7 percent whose spouses didnÛªt use hospice. After further adjustment based on patient and spousal characteristics, spouses of hospice users were significantly more likely than spouses of non-hospice users to have reduction in symptoms. ÛÏAlthough overall depression scores increase following death in spouses regardless of hospice use, our work suggests that hospice use is associated with a modest reduction in depressive symptoms for a subgroup of surviving spouses. Because most of these spouses are themselves Medicare beneficiaries, caring for their well-being is not only important for individual health but may also be fiscally prudent. Although there has been significant attention to the current unsustainable level of spending on health care for seriously ill persons in the United States, these analyses do not even begin to factor in the downstream effects of caregiving for a seriously ill relative on spouses and other family members. Maximizing the use of hospice for appropriate patients is a high-value intervention that can benefit both the patients and their families. Attention to the quality of caregiver support and bereavement services within hospice will be necessary to increase its benefits for families,Û the study concludes. We need to educate the public and even our providers of care about the importance of palliative care and hospice care.
People with Depression May Be More Likely to Develop ParkinsonÛªs Disease
People with Depression May Be More Likely to Develop ParkinsonÛªs Disease People with depression may be more likely to develop ParkinsonÛªs disease, according to a large study published in the online issue of Neurologyå¨, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. ÛÏWe saw this link between depression and ParkinsonÛªs disease over a time span of more than two decades, so depression may be a very early symptom of ParkinsonÛªs disease or a risk factor for the disease,Û said study author Peter Nordstr̦m, PhD, at UmeÌ´ University in UmeÌ´, Sweden. The researchers also examined siblings, and found no link between one sibling having depression and the other having ParkinsonÛªs disease. For the study, researchers started with all Swedish citizens age 50 and older at the end of 2005. From that, they took the 140,688 people who were diagnosed with depression from 1987 to 2012. These people were then matched with three control participants of the same sex and year of birth who had not been diagnosed with depression, for a total of 421,718 control participants. The participants were then followed for up to 26 years. During this time, 1,485 people with depression developed ParkinsonÛªs disease, or 1.1 percent, while 1,775 people, or 0.4 percent of those who did not have depression, developed ParkinsonÛªs disease. ParkinsonÛªs disease was diagnosed an average of 4.5 years after the start of the study. The likelihood of developing ParkinsonÛªs disease decreased over time. People with depression were 3.2 times more likely to develop ParkinsonÛªs disease within a year after the study started than people who did not have depression. By 15 to 25 years after the study started, people with depression were about 50 percent more likely to develop ParkinsonÛªs disease. People with more serious cases of depression were also more likely to develop ParkinsonÛªs disease. People who had been hospitalized for depression five or more times were 40 percent more likely to develop ParkinsonÛªs disease than people who had been hospitalized for depression only one time. People who had been hospitalized for depression were also 3.5 times more likely to develop ParkinsonÛªs disease than people who had been treated for depression as outpatients. The link between depression and ParkinsonÛªs disease did not change when researchers adjusted for other conditions related to depression, such as traumatic brain injury, stroke and alcohol and drug abuse.