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Patients with dementia syndrome in public and private services in southern Brazil

Comparação do atendimento aos pacientes com demência em serviços público e privado na região sul do Brasil

Abstracts

Dementia is characterized by deficits in more than one cognitive domain, affecting language, praxis, gnosis, memory or executive functions. Despite the essential economic growth observed in many developing countries, especially over the last century, huge differences remain in health care, whether among nations themselves or across different regions of the same country.

OBJECTIVE:

The aim of this study was to assess the management and main features of dementia, comparing public (PUBL) and private (PRIV) reference services.

METHODS:

We performed a retrospective analysis of medical records of subjects with dementia. Sociocultural data, mean follow-up time in the service, Mini-mental State Examination (MMSE) scores at admission, main diagnosis of dementia, family history of dementia, comorbidities, imaging methods and treatment were assessed.

RESULTS:

the time elapsed before admission in the service of the PUBL group (2.08±2.06 years) was higher than for the PRIV group (1.24±2.55 years) (p=0.0356); the MMSE score at admission in the PUBL group (15.05±8.16 years) was lower than in the PRIV group (18.95±6.69 years) (p=0.016); the PUBL group showed lower treatment coverage with cholinesterase inhibitors (52.94%) than the PRIV group (84.93%) (p=0.0001).

CONCLUSION:

Patients seeking the public health service have less access to medical care, reaching the system at more advanced stages of disease. The public service also offered lower pharmacological coverage.

dementia; epidemiology; Alzheimer's disease; outpatient clinics; public service; private service


Demência é caracterizada por déficts em mais de um domínio cognitivo, afetando linguagem, praxia, gnosia, memória ou função executiva. Apesar do importante crescimento econômico observado em diversos países em desenvolvimento, especialmente no último século, ainda existem diferenças significativas no que se refere aos cuidados em saúde, seja em meio aos países entre si, ou mesmo quando observadas regiões dentro do mesmo país.

OBJETIVO:

Avaliar o manejo e principais características da demência, comparando serviços de referência, exclusivamente público (PUBL) e exclusivamente privado (PRIV).

MÉTODOS:

Analise retrospectiva dos prontuários médicos dos indivíduos com demência, sendo observados dados socioculturais, tempo médio até o acompanhamento, escore do Mini-exame do Estado Mental (MEEM) na admissão, diagnóstico etiológico da demência, história familiar demencial, comorbidades, métodos de imagem e tratamento.

RESULTADOS:

O tempo até o acompanhamento no grupo PUBL (2,08±2,06 anos) foi maior do que no grupo PRIV (1,24±2,55 anos) (p=0,0356); o escore do MEEM no grupo PUBL (15,05±8,16) foi menor do que no grupo PRIV (18,95± 6,69) (p=0,016); o grupo PUBL apresentou menor cobertura terapêutica (42,94%) com inibidores da acetilcolinesterase do que o grupo PRIV (84,93%) (p=0,0001).

CONCLUSÃO:

Os pacientes que buscaram o serviço público possuíam menor acesso aos cuidados de saúde, chegando ao sistema em estágios mais avançados da doença, apresentando também menor cobertura farmacológica.

demência; epidemiologia; doença de Alzheimer; atendimento ambulatorial; serviço público; serviço privado


INTRODUCTION

There are numerous factors for people seeking health care, such as limited activity, number of chronic diseases, severity of symptoms and self-reported health status.1Fernández-Olano C, Hidalgo JD, Cerdá-Díaz R, et al. Factors associated with health care utilization by the elderly in a public health care system. Health Policy 2006;75:131-139. These reasons are much more common among the elderly, especially in those suffering from dementia.2Channon AA, Andrade MV, Noronha K, Leone T, Dilip TR. Impatient care of the elderly in Brazil and India: Assessing social inequalities. Soc Sci Med 2012;75:2394-2402.

Dementia is characterized by deficits in more than one cognitive domain, affecting language, praxis, gnosis, memory or executive functions.3American Psychiatry Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th Ed. Washington, D.C. American Psychiatry Association 1994. , 4Prince M, Bryce R, Albanese E, Wimo A, Ribeiro W, Ferri CP. The global prevalence of dementia: A systematic review and metaanalysis. Alzheimers Dement 2013;9:63-75. Memory must be affected, although it may remain relatively preserved in initial stages of some forms of dementia.5Caramelli P, Barbosa MT. Como diagnosticar as quatro causas mais frequentes de demência? Rev Bras Psiquiatr 2002;24:7-10. Also, the condition must be sufficiently severe to interfere in the patient's daily activities.4Prince M, Bryce R, Albanese E, Wimo A, Ribeiro W, Ferri CP. The global prevalence of dementia: A systematic review and metaanalysis. Alzheimers Dement 2013;9:63-75. , 5Caramelli P, Barbosa MT. Como diagnosticar as quatro causas mais frequentes de demência? Rev Bras Psiquiatr 2002;24:7-10.

Epidemiological studies have demonstrated that dementia incidence and prevalence has increased exponentially with the advance of age.4Prince M, Bryce R, Albanese E, Wimo A, Ribeiro W, Ferri CP. The global prevalence of dementia: A systematic review and metaanalysis. Alzheimers Dement 2013;9:63-75. Despite scarcity of epidemiological surveys in Brazil, it is known that progressive population aging imposes great burden to society.6Abbott A. Dementia: a problem for our age. Nature 2011;475:1-4. This economic, psychological and social burden is set to increase, considering estimates that 25% of Brazilians will be elderly by 2050.6Abbott A. Dementia: a problem for our age. Nature 2011;475:1-4. In developed countries, dementia prevalence doubles every 5 years.7Russ TC, Batty GD, Hearnshaw GF, Fenton C, Starr JM. Geographical variation in dementia: systematic review with meta-analysis. Int J Epidemiol 2012;41:1012-1032.

Among the different causes of dementia, the four most common diseases are Alzheimer's disease (AD), vascular dementia (VD), frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and Lewy's Bodies dementia (LD).5Caramelli P, Barbosa MT. Como diagnosticar as quatro causas mais frequentes de demência? Rev Bras Psiquiatr 2002;24:7-10. , 6Abbott A. Dementia: a problem for our age. Nature 2011;475:1-4. AD figures as the most frequent form of dementia, representing 50 to 80% of all cases.6Abbott A. Dementia: a problem for our age. Nature 2011;475:1-4. FTD is responsible for 5 to 10% of dementia cases.6Abbott A. Dementia: a problem for our age. Nature 2011;475:1-4. There is also Parkinson's disease with dementia (PDD),8Verbaan D, Jeukens-Visser M, Van Laar T, et al. SCOPA - Cognition Cutoof Value for Detection of Parkinson's Disease Dementia. Mov Disord 2011;10:1881-1886. another significant cause of dementia, sharing several features with LD, complicating their specific diagnoses,9Dodel R, Csoti I, Ebersbach G, et al. Lewy body dementia and Parkinson's disease with dementia. J Neurol 2008;255:39-47. plus mixed dementia (MD), which exhibits clinical and pathophysiological findings of both AD and VD concomitantly.1010 Rockwood K, Macknight C, Wentzel C, et al. The Diagnosis of "Mixed" Dementia in the Consortium for the Investigation of Vascular Impairment of Cognition (CIVIC). Ann N Y Acad Sci 2006;903:522-528.

Despite the essential economic growth observed in many developing countries, especially over the last century, huge differences remain in health care, whether among nations themselves or across different regions of the same country. This can be explained, in most cases, by unequal economic development, insufficient distribution of financial resources, inefficiency of public health care programs or because of differences between the health care services utilized.1111 Fang P, Dong S, Xiao J, Liu C, Feng X, Wang Y. Regional inequality in health and its determinants: Evidence from China. Health Policy 2010; 94:14-25.

In Brazil, since 1989, public healthcare has been based on the Sistema Único de Saúde - SUS (Unified Health System), which grants free health care at all levels of complexity to all citizens, respecting their individual needs, aiming to prioritize the most critical cases.1212 Brasil. Constituição (1988). Constituição da República Federativa do Brasil. Brasília, DF: Senado, 1988. The system is financed by taxes and social contributions, but private initiative also plays a part in the process by providing physical infrastructure and human resources. Numerous clinics, hospitals and laboratories, as well as many health professionals, engage in activities for public and private services concomitantly.1313 Victora CG, Barreto ML, do Carmo Leal M, et al. Health conditions and health-policy innovations in Brazil: the way forward. Lancet 2012;377: 2042-2053. The SUS has financing and management issues in several regions of the country; this creates significant disparities between public and private healthcare systems, especially with regard to patient accommodation, health care and resource availability, and individual follow-up.1414 Schiozer RF, Saito CC, Saito R. Financial health and customer satisfaction in private health care providers in Brazil. Cad Saude Publica. 2011; 27:2175-2187.

In view of the scenario outlined, the aim of this study was to assess the management and main features of dementia, comparing public and private referral services in the city of Ponta Grossa, southern Brazil.

METHODS

A retrospective analysis of the medical records of all patients admitted by the SUS in the Neurology outpatient unit of the University Teaching Hospital of Campos Gerais (HURCG) and also of all patients treated at the Neurology service of the private clinic Inovare Serviços de Saúde Ltda (INOVARE), spanning from the beginning of 2011 to the end of 2013. Both services were located in the city of Ponta Grossa, state of Paraná, southern region of Brazil. Attending neurologists were the same, applying the assessment and treatment criteria for dementia determined by the American Academy of Neurology and the Brazilian Academy of Neurology.1515 Recomendações para o diagnóstico e tratamento da doença de Alzheimer e demência vascular: aspectos gerais. Dement Neuropsychol 2011;5(suppl 1). , 1616 Doody RS, Stevens JC, Beck C, et al. Practice parameter: Management of dementia (an evidence-based review): Report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology 2001;56:1154-1166.

This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the State University of Ponta Grossa, Brazil (process no. 16132 - 2012).

Selection criteria. Medical records with the following characteristics were included: [1] presence of sufficient data to characterize the DS and to determine its specific etiological entity; and [2] patients followed by a physician working at both the services evaluated.

Data collection. Clinical records were systematically assessed. Demographic and sociocultural data were collected: age, gender, ethnicity, schooling, occupation, residence, smoking and alcohol abuse, along with clinical data: time elapsed since the onset of symptoms and admission in the neurology service, score on the Mini-mental State Examination (MMSE)1717 Bertolucci PH, Brucki SM, Campacci SR, Juliano Y. The Mini-Mental State Examination in a general population: impact of educational status. Arq Neuropsiquiatr 1994;52:1-7. at admission, family history of dementia, comorbidities, brain imaging tests required and the type of therapeutic approach for dementia treatment.

After data collection, patients with dementia were classified into specific diagnoses according to established diagnostic criteria: the DSM-IV criteria3American Psychiatry Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th Ed. Washington, D.C. American Psychiatry Association 1994. were used to confirm the diagnosis of AD, VD and MD; for confirmation of PDD, the Diagnostic Criteria for Mild Cognitive Impairment in Parkinson's Disease were used;1818 Litvan I, Goldman JG, Tröster AI, et al. Diagnostic Criteria for Mild Cognitive Impairment in Parkinson's Disease: Movment Disorder Society Task Force Guidelines. Mov Disord 2012;27:349-356. for LD, the criteria in the Consensus for Clinical and Pathological Diagnosis of Dementia with Lewy's Bodies were employed;1919 McKeith IG, Galasko D, Kosaka K, et al. Consensus guidelines for the clinical and pathologic diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB): report of the consortium on DLB international workshop. Neurology 1996;47:1113-1124. and for the diagnosis of FTD, the criteria of the Consensus for Clinical and Pathological Diagnosis of Frontotemporal Dementia were applied.2020 Neary D, Snowden JS, Gustafson L, et al. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration: a consensus on clinical diagnostic criteria. Neurology 1998;51: 1546-1554.

For AD, based on individual scores on the MMSE1414 Schiozer RF, Saito CC, Saito R. Financial health and customer satisfaction in private health care providers in Brazil. Cad Saude Publica. 2011; 27:2175-2187. at admission, patients were staged according to the severity of the dementia. Scores below 10 defined advanced disease, and above 19 to 26 defined mild disease.2121 NCCMH Dementia: Supporting People with Dementia and their Carers in Health and Social Care. Leicester and London: The British Psychological Society and the Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2007.

Comparison between groups. Subjects fulfilling the selection criteria were divided into two groups: the PUBL group, based on the medical records of patients attended at the HURCG, representing the public healthcare system; and the PRIV group, based on the medical records assessed at INOVARE, representing the private healthcare system.

Statistics. All data were tested according to the distribution pattern (normal or non-normal). Statistical differences between group means were determined using the one-tailed Student's t-test for normal distributions, and the Mann-Whitney test for non-normal distributions. For the differences between the expected values and the values actually found, the Chi-square test with Yates correction and Fisher's exact test were used. The results were expressed as mean ± s.d. (standard deviation). Differences were considered significant for p<0.05.

RESULTS

Thirty-four patients for the PUBL group and 166 patients for the PRIV group were selected. Subjects treated in the private service had higher mean age and schooling and also lived more frequently in urban areas and had lower rates of smoking and alcohol abuse when compared to the patients that sought the public service (Table 1). The gender proportion (male:female) differed significantly between group, with 0.48:1 in the PUBL group versus 1:2.13 in the PRIV group (p=0.0002).

Table 1.
Epidemiological and sociocultural data of patients with dementia.

For mean waiting period until admission and mean score on the MMSE at admission, a difference was observed between groups with regard to the specific diagnosis for dementia (Tables 2 and 3). The patients under the public healthcare system took longer to be seen by the specialist, waiting on average 2.08 (±2.06) years, versus 1.24 (±2.55) years in the private service (p=0.0356). Patients from the PRIV group had higher scores on the MMSE at admission, with an average of 18.95 (±6.69) versus 15.05 (±8.16) in the PUBL group (p=0.0016).

Table 2.
Mean years elapsed until treatment.

Table 3.
Mean MMSE* scores at time of admission to service.

Concerning investigation of the dementia, there was significant difference regarding the standard brain imaging method for diagnostic support. In the PUBL group, 29 (85.29%) individuals underwent cranial computed tomography (CCT) as the exam of choice, while in the PRIV group, only 66 (39.75%) had this test (p=0.0001). This pattern was inverted for head magnetic resonance imaging (HMRI), where 98 (59.03%) patients were submitted to the exam in the PRIV group, versus only 8 (23.52%) patients in the PUBL group (p=0.0002).

Pharmacological management through acetylcholinesterase inhibitors was substantially higher in patients treated under the private system, totaling 141 (84.93%) subjects, compared with only 18 (52.94%) subjects in the public system (p=0.0001). It was observed that 9 (26.47%) individuals in the PUBL group used memantine, versus only 12 (7.22%) in the PRIV group (p=0.0028).

There was no statistically significant difference between groups for distribution of dementia into specific diagnoses, except for VD, which was more common among patients seeking the public healthcare system (p=0.0346) (Figure 1). Risk factors associated with vascular disease (systemic arterial hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, alcohol abuse, personal history of stroke and cardiovascular disease) were similarly present in both groups, except for smoking. Smoking was absent in the PRIV group, while in PUBL group, 4 (66.66%) patients were smokers (p=0.0082).

Figure 1.
Prevalence of dementias according to specific etiology. Other types of dementia - Public service: 01 Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus - Private Service 01; Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus, 01 Progressive Supranuclear Palsy and 01 Multiple System Atrophy Associated Dementia

For AD, regarding severity of the disease when seen by the neurologist, relevant statistical disparities between the groups were found (Table 4). In AD, the PRIV group had 52 (50%) patients admitted in the service at mild stage of disease, while in the PUBL group, only 3 (16.66%) patients with this stage were admitted (p=0.01). Among subjects from the private system, only 12 (11.53%) individuals had dementia at advanced stage upon seeking the service, while in the public system 7 (38.88%) patients with advanced stage dementia were admitted (p=0.0081). The pharmacological therapeutic approach used in patients with AD showed significant differences between groups with mild dementia, as depicted in Table 5.

Table 4.
Clinical features of patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Table 5.
Pharmacological therapeutic approach in mild, moderate and severe Alzheimer's disease (AD), by number of patients.

DISCUSSION

Epidemiological and clinical data obtained through group analysis revealed substantial inequalities between those populations treated under the public and private services, despite the fact that all patients were assisted by the same physicians, with similar assessment and therapeutic protocols. The mere finding that the number of subjects selected under the public system represents only about 1/5 of those under the private system could be an important indicator of the obstacles faced by patients with dementia gaining access to an attending neurologist in the public healthcare system. This finding could also be related to a higher number of individuals from this area of the country seeking treatment in the public health system, representing 23.52% of the PUBL Group. Likewise, the lower average years of schooling in this population might have hindered the perception of the signs and symptoms of dementia, perhaps explaining the delay in seeking medical care. Moreover, considering the large socioeconomic difference observed in the population studied (Gini index=0.36 to 0.40 - IBGE/2014), the involvement of cultural and socioeconomic features in the evolution of dementia could be implicated as a contributing factor to this difference. Another relevant issue is the disparity between the physical infrastructure of public and private services, and its influence on the diagnostic and therapeutic management of dementia, revealing the wide inequality in care between different regions of the same country.1111 Fang P, Dong S, Xiao J, Liu C, Feng X, Wang Y. Regional inequality in health and its determinants: Evidence from China. Health Policy 2010; 94:14-25.

In countries where there is lower distribution of economic resources for healthcare, the late diagnosis of dementia could be explained by several elements, such as low schooling of the population, concentration of diagnostic facilities in more remote large urban centers, costs related to diagnostic management and the social stigma itself which accompanies dementia.2222 Maestre GE. Assessing Dementia in Resource-Poor Regions. Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep 2012;12:511-519. It was observed that elderly patients with higher schooling and access to the private service (PRIV group) received better health care, corroborating the findings reported in India2Channon AA, Andrade MV, Noronha K, Leone T, Dilip TR. Impatient care of the elderly in Brazil and India: Assessing social inequalities. Soc Sci Med 2012;75:2394-2402. and Cuba,2323 Llibre Jde J, Fernández Y, Marcheco B, et al. Prevalence of Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in a Havana Municipality: A Community-Based Study among Elderly Residents. MEDICC Rev 2009;11:29-35. countries with a high percentage of people living below the poverty line.

In Brazil, besides major social inequality, there are substantial differences in the quality of public healthcare assistance offered across the numerous regions of the country.2Channon AA, Andrade MV, Noronha K, Leone T, Dilip TR. Impatient care of the elderly in Brazil and India: Assessing social inequalities. Soc Sci Med 2012;75:2394-2402. In a study performed by Dias et al.2424 Dias FLC, Silva RMFL, Moraes EM, Caramelli P. Perfil clínico e autonômico de pacientes com doença de Alzheimer e demência mista. Rev Assoc Med Bras 2013;59:435-441. in Brazil's southeast region, subjects assessed under the public system had lower waiting times before being seen (22.6 months) and slightly higher mean MMSE scores (16.4±5.0) compared to the present study, probably because of the better quality of health care services in this particular region. Another study, by Miranda et al.,2525 Miranda LFJR, Matoso RO, Rodrigues MV, et al. Factors influencing possible delay in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. Findings from a tertiary Public University Hospital. Dement Neuropsychol 2011;5:328-331. also performed in the southeast region, involving a group of patients with features similar to those of the PUBL group (mean age of 77.8±6.8 years, mean schooling of 3 years), showed an even shorter waiting time until diagnosis (1.5 years). This difference is more evident when comparing to the reality of developed countries. In a German study, conducted by Froelich et al.,2626 Froelich L, Gertz HJ, Heun R, et al. Donepezil for Alzheimer's disease in clinical practice - The Donald Study. A multicenter 24 - week clinical Trial in Germany. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 2004;18:37-43. the research subjects had a mean MMSE score of 19.7 points and mean waiting time until follow-up of 15.8 months, reflecting the higher schooling and better accessibility to health care in the German population.2424 Dias FLC, Silva RMFL, Moraes EM, Caramelli P. Perfil clínico e autonômico de pacientes com doença de Alzheimer e demência mista. Rev Assoc Med Bras 2013;59:435-441. On the other hand, these findings for the German public healthcare system resembled the results found in the Brazilian private healthcare system (PRIV group), demonstrating the differences between this two countries' health systems and how much needs to be improved regarding public health care in Brazil to attain the quality and availability of developed countries.

The mean age of the PRIV group was significantly higher, may be explained by elements such as lower incidence of risk factors among these individuals,2727 Sosa-Ortiz AL, Acosta-Castillo I, Prince MJ. Epidemiology of Dementias and Alzheimer's Disease. Arch Med Res 2012;43:600-608. higher prevalence of subjects at the mild stage of AD,2828 Paradise M, Walker Z, Cooper C, et al. Prediction of survival in Alzheimer's disease - The LASER AD longitudinal study. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2009;24:739-747. higher schooling (providing protection against early manifestation of dementia),2727 Sosa-Ortiz AL, Acosta-Castillo I, Prince MJ. Epidemiology of Dementias and Alzheimer's Disease. Arch Med Res 2012;43:600-608. greater concentration in the urban area1818 Litvan I, Goldman JG, Tröster AI, et al. Diagnostic Criteria for Mild Cognitive Impairment in Parkinson's Disease: Movment Disorder Society Task Force Guidelines. Mov Disord 2012;27:349-356. and access to the private assistance setting.2Channon AA, Andrade MV, Noronha K, Leone T, Dilip TR. Impatient care of the elderly in Brazil and India: Assessing social inequalities. Soc Sci Med 2012;75:2394-2402. In spite of the disparities between gender proportions, both groups presented female predominance, thus confirming this gender as the most frequently affected by dementia.4Prince M, Bryce R, Albanese E, Wimo A, Ribeiro W, Ferri CP. The global prevalence of dementia: A systematic review and metaanalysis. Alzheimers Dement 2013;9:63-75. , 2929 Herrera Jr E, Caramelli P, Silveira ASB, Nitrini R. Epidemiologic Survey of Dementia in a Community-Dwelling Brazilian Population. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 2002;16:103-108. However, this differs from the reality found in some developing countries, where male gender predominates among patients with dementia.2323 Llibre Jde J, Fernández Y, Marcheco B, et al. Prevalence of Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in a Havana Municipality: A Community-Based Study among Elderly Residents. MEDICC Rev 2009;11:29-35.

In terms of specific dementia causes, in the PUBL group, the distribution followed the most common epidemiological pattern found in the literature, showing AD as the main cause of SD, followed by VD.6Abbott A. Dementia: a problem for our age. Nature 2011;475:1-4. , 2929 Herrera Jr E, Caramelli P, Silveira ASB, Nitrini R. Epidemiologic Survey of Dementia in a Community-Dwelling Brazilian Population. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 2002;16:103-108. However, the PRIV group exhibited a different pattern, with MD as the second-most prevalent, similar to results found in other studies1010 Rockwood K, Macknight C, Wentzel C, et al. The Diagnosis of "Mixed" Dementia in the Consortium for the Investigation of Vascular Impairment of Cognition (CIVIC). Ann N Y Acad Sci 2006;903:522-528. , 2323 Llibre Jde J, Fernández Y, Marcheco B, et al. Prevalence of Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in a Havana Municipality: A Community-Based Study among Elderly Residents. MEDICC Rev 2009;11:29-35.. Rockwood et al.,1010 Rockwood K, Macknight C, Wentzel C, et al. The Diagnosis of "Mixed" Dementia in the Consortium for the Investigation of Vascular Impairment of Cognition (CIVIC). Ann N Y Acad Sci 2006;903:522-528. in Canada, analyzed a sample of 603 patients with dementia, 372 of whom had AD as the etiological diagnosis, 76 MD, 73 VD and 82 with other types of dementia. In a study performed in Havana by Libre et al.,2323 Llibre Jde J, Fernández Y, Marcheco B, et al. Prevalence of Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in a Havana Municipality: A Community-Based Study among Elderly Residents. MEDICC Rev 2009;11:29-35. among 1499 patients with suspected dementia, 46.4% had AD as the underlying disease, followed by MD, responsible for 28.2% of the cases.

Regarding the standard diagnostic approach for ordering brain imaging exams, a notable difference was observed between the systems. HMRI, despite being recommended as the method of choice for diagnostic brain imaging in dementia assessment,3030 Engelhardt E, Tocquer C, André C, et al. Demência Vascular Critérios diagnósticos e exames complementares. Dement Neuropsychol 2011;5:49-77. was significantly less available for diagnostic complementation in patients from the PUBL group. Nevertheless, the vast majority of subjects treated under the public system had access to the CCT scan, an acceptable method to complement diagnosis and the therapeutic approach when HMRI is unavailable.3030 Engelhardt E, Tocquer C, André C, et al. Demência Vascular Critérios diagnósticos e exames complementares. Dement Neuropsychol 2011;5:49-77.

With respect to the therapeutic approach, the use of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, drugs indicated for the treatment of all stages of AD dementia2626 Froelich L, Gertz HJ, Heun R, et al. Donepezil for Alzheimer's disease in clinical practice - The Donald Study. A multicenter 24 - week clinical Trial in Germany. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 2004;18:37-43. and available free of charge under the SUS, differed substantially between the groups. These drugs were more frequently used in patients from the PRIV group. Memantine, a medication predominantly indicated for severe stages of dementia2626 Froelich L, Gertz HJ, Heun R, et al. Donepezil for Alzheimer's disease in clinical practice - The Donald Study. A multicenter 24 - week clinical Trial in Germany. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 2004;18:37-43. and unavailable under the SUS, was significantly more used among patients from the PUBL group, indicating the higher number of individuals with advanced cases in this group. In a South African study published by Truter,3131 Truter I. Prescribing of drugs for Alzhemeir's disease: a South African database analysis. Int Psychogeriatr 2010;22:264-269. it was found that, among prescriptions for the treatment of AD, 24.70% of patients received memantine as a standard pharmacological intervention. This number was similar to the findings of the PUBL group (27.77%), suggesting a more severe clinical profile of patients treated in these services, with probable late diagnosis of AD.

Independently of dementia type, disease stage, or complementary method by which the diagnosis was obtained, patients from both groups had good conditions of drug administration and continuous follow-up. Except for the individuals with mild AD under treatment in the public healthcare system, all patients, irrespective of group or disease stage, had therapeutic coverage of over 60% in the use of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. In a French study performed by Cantegreil-Kallen et al.,3232 Cantegreil-Kellen I, Turbelin C, Angel P, et al. Dementia management in France. Health care and support services in the community. Dementia 2006;5:317-326. 631 questionnaires answered by general physicians about their patients with AD were analyzed. It was observed that only 50% of patients received prescriptions of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. Therapeutic coverage with antidementia drugs is even lower in the majority of European countries, probably because of cultural preference for seeing a general physician instead of a specialist for follow-up.3333 Waldemar G, Phung KT, Burns A, et al. Access to diagnostic evaluation and treatment for dementia in Europe. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2007; 22:47-54.

In Brazil, as in other developing countries, there are major shortcomings in the implementation of programs related to elderly welfare and the raising of adequate financial resources to fund high social impact initiatives for the population with dementia, as well as in the effective training of professionals and caregivers for scientifically accurate and humanized care of this patient group.3434 Cieto BB, Valera GG, Soares GB, et al. Dementia care in public health in Brazil and the world. Dement Neuropsychol 2014;8:40-46. The social and financial impact related to the care of patients with dementia falls largely on patients' families,3434 Cieto BB, Valera GG, Soares GB, et al. Dementia care in public health in Brazil and the world. Dement Neuropsychol 2014;8:40-46. favoring those who have access to private means of care.

Therefore, it can be concluded that patients with dementia seeking the public service in the region analyzed have lower access to health care, entering the system at more severe stages of disease while also having poorer therapeutic coverage in the use of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors compared to patients admitted into the private healthcare system.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Jan-Mar 2015

History

  • Received
    21 Nov 2014
  • Accepted
    22 Jan 2015
Academia Brasileira de Neurologia, Departamento de Neurologia Cognitiva e Envelhecimento R. Vergueiro, 1353 sl.1404 - Ed. Top Towers Offices, Torre Norte, São Paulo, SP, Brazil, CEP 04101-000, Tel.: +55 11 5084-9463 | +55 11 5083-3876 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: revistadementia@abneuro.org.br | demneuropsy@uol.com.br