2004
DOI: 10.1177/147323000403200207
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The Role of General Practitioners in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Alzheimer's Disease: A Multinational Survey

Abstract: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a growing healthcare problem. Early diagnosis and effective treatment would benefit patients and caregivers, as well as having economic implications. We conducted a survey of 741 caregivers of patients with AD in Australia, France, Italy, Spain and the UK to assess the current situation regarding the diagnosis and treatment of AD in routine clinical practice. The average time from when symptoms were first noticed by the caregiver to making the first doctor's appointment was 4 months… Show more

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Cited by 73 publications
(79 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…In the primary care surveys that explored the tasks of the general practitioner in dementia-care management, most general practitioners reported feeling highly involved in dementia care. In contrast, caregivers found communication unsatisfactory and strongly regretted the time delay between first symptoms and diagnosis [22,23,27]. In this light it is relevant to mention that caregivers admitted that they did not appreciate the use of explicit diagnostic terms [21].…”
Section: Communication and Coordination Skills Of The General Practitmentioning
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the primary care surveys that explored the tasks of the general practitioner in dementia-care management, most general practitioners reported feeling highly involved in dementia care. In contrast, caregivers found communication unsatisfactory and strongly regretted the time delay between first symptoms and diagnosis [22,23,27]. In this light it is relevant to mention that caregivers admitted that they did not appreciate the use of explicit diagnostic terms [21].…”
Section: Communication and Coordination Skills Of The General Practitmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…In particular, behavioral disturbances and psychosocial aspects were rated as highly difficult and not necessarily part of their job [15,24,26]. Caregivers reported their general practitioner to be unaware of the daily homecare problems and only half of the caregivers had confidence in the general practitioner's dementiamanagement skills [23,27].…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…AD duration, from onset to diagnosis, is varied. A report from Millward Brown, 182 on diagnosis of dementia, finds an average of 32 months between onset of symptoms and diagnosis in the UK, whereas Wilkinson and colleagues 183 report a period of 12 months from onset to diagnosis. A value of 12 months is used for the AD duration parameter in the SHTAC model (with an assumed SD of 6 months), which is the conservative estimate (favouring the drug treatment cohort), undertaking sensitivity analysis at an input of 32 months.…”
Section: Baseline Cohort Of Ad Patientsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Respondents were not confident to recommend medication on the time of diagnose but GPs are easily accessible [24]. The overall score reflects low confidence with the respondents.…”
Section: Confidence In Making Diagnosis Dementiamentioning
confidence: 99%