Objective: To describe the design, development, and baseline characteristics of enrollees of a home-based, interdisciplinary, dyadic, pilot dementia care program.
Design: Single-arm, dementia care intervention in partnership with primary care providers delivered by Health Coaches to persons with dementia and caregiver "dyads" and supervised by an interdisciplinary team.
Setting: Home- and virtual-based dyad support.
Participants: Persons with mild cognitive impairment or dementia diagnosis and/or who were prescribed antidementia medications; had an identified caregiver willing to participate; were under the care of a partner primary care provider; and had health insurance through the affiliated accountable care organization (Banner Health Network).
Intervention: Provision of personalized dementia education and support in the home or virtually by Health Coaches supported by an interdisciplinary team.
Measurements: Cognition, function, mood, and behavior of persons with dementia; caregiver stress and program satisfaction; primary care provider satisfaction.
Results: Served dyads from three primary care clinics with a total of 87 dyads enrolled between December 2018 and June 2020.
Conclusion: A pilot Dementia Care Partners demonstrated feasibility and suggested acceptability, and high satisfaction among primary care providers and caregivers.
Keywords: Dementia; caregivers; chronic care management; collaborative care; community-based.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.