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Management of Challenging Behaviour in Primary Care. Daniel Collerton and Karen Franks Gateshead Older People’s Mental Health Service. Levels of Challenging Behaviour. Mental Health Services. Workbook. Non Specialist Services. Character of challenging behaviours.
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Management of Challenging Behaviour in Primary Care Daniel Collerton and Karen Franks Gateshead Older People’s Mental Health Service
Levels of Challenging Behaviour Mental Health Services Workbook Non Specialist Services
Character of challenging behaviours • Reflects the capability of the setting to manage behaviour – poorer settings generate more challenge • Not related to severity of dementia • Stressful and burdensome to carers • Purposeful • Limited potential to respond to interventions • Usually transitory
Principles • Who, what, why, when? • Why is this a problem? • Always consider non-pharmacological management first • Always consider physical illness, esp. delirium and pain
Management guidelines • Talk to the person whose behaviour is causing concern • Identify purpose of behaviour • Identify and intervene in contributory factors • Support carers • Balance risks • Be mindful of legal frameworks • Aim for tolerable behaviour • Review and refer
What is the behaviour that challenges you? Mild- moderate behaviour: e.g. wandering, night-time disturbance, depression, apathy, repetitive questioning, shadowing, verbal aggression, mild sexual disinhibition. Severe- extreme behaviour: e.g.severe depression, psychosis, severe agitation, screaming, physical violence, suicidal behaviour, severe sexual disinhibition. Is the person with dementia, or another person at immediate and serious risk because of the behaviour? NO Is detail known about the behaviour? YES Seek specialist advice; consider transfer of the person to a safer setting depending on need, psychiatric or general hospital admission, respite care. Contact Mental Health Service for advice YES NO Describe exactly what the behaviour is, when, where and with whom the behaviour occurs. Detailed documentation is very useful. Have you used an assessment tool? Examples include ABC records, behavioural charts Was onset quite sudden? If so this could be due to physical illness, take a urine specimen if possible and arrange medical review Use the information… To work through the challenging behaviour workbook. Gather more information… At each stage you may need to gather further information about the person, then go back and use it. Identify reasons for the behaviour… …make a plan… …and put the plan into action Review the situation… Has your plan worked? Whose problem is it anyway? Could the person’s behaviour be due to the environment? Could procedures or routines be made more flexible to suit the persons’ needs? YES Well done! Continue to review the situation to ensure continuation of helpful strategies. NO Has the behaviour improved but not disappeared? If so is it now manageable? If not, do you need help from someone else? People who may be able to help include…
Specialist advice • Mental health services • Challenging Behaviour Teams
Principles with Medication • Keep it simple • Start low, go slow • Think about what you are trying to achieve • Monitor effects • Encourage effective recording • Consider change in timings before increase in dose • Can this setting cope with ‘prn’ meds?
Suggested Starting Dosages • Lorazepam 0.5mg • Clomethiazole 192mg • Trazodone 25 – 50mg • Sodium Valproate 100mg bd • SSRIs • Mirtazapine 15mg nocte • Cholinesterase inhibitors – incl patch • (Memantine)
Antipsychotics • Should not be first line • Probably should be started only with secondary care opinion/advice • Keep under review • Many do not benefit, some do • Always a risk benefit decision • Keep for some psychotic symptoms and severe aggression • Some people may need to stay on
Antipsychotics - Dosage • Risperidone 0.5mg • Quetiapine 25mg • Amisulpiride 25 – 50 mg • Olanzapine 2.5mg
Further reading • The use of antipsychotic medication for people with dementia. Sube Banerjee, Department of Health (2009) • Dementia: Supporting people with dementia and their carers in health and social care National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (2006)