WS6

DETERMinants of quality of life, care and costs, and consequences of INequalities in people with Dementia and their carers (DETERMIND): A protocol paper

Nicolas Farina1 | Ben Hicks1 | Kate Baxter2 | Yvonne Birks2 | Carol Brayne3 | Margaret Dangoor4 | Josie Dixon4 | Peter R. Harris5 |
Bo Hu4 | Martin Knapp4 | Eleanor Miles5 | Rotem Perach5 | Sanna Read4 | Louise Robinson6 | Jennifer Rusted5 | Rob Stewart7,8 | Alan Thomas6 | Raphael Wittenberg4 | Sube Banerjee1,9

Objectives: DETERMIND (DETERMinants of quality of life, care and costs, and con- sequences of INequalities in people with Dementia and their carers) is designed to address fundamental, and, as yet unanswered questions about inequalities, outcomes and costs following diagnosis with dementia. These answers are needed to improve the quality of care and equity of access to care, and therefore the quality of life, of people with dementia and their carers.

Method: DETERMIND is a programme of research consisting of seven complemen- tary workstreams (WS) exploring various components that may result in unequal dementia care:
WS1: Recruitment and follow-up of the DETERMIND cohort—900 people with dementia and their carers from three geographically and socially diverse sites within six months following diagnosis, and follow them up for three years.
WS2: Investigation of the extent of inequalities in access to dementia care. WS3: Relationship between use and costs of services and outcomes.
WS4: Experiences of self-funders of care.
WS5: Decision-making processes for people with dementia and carers. WS6: Effect of diagnostic stage and services on outcomes.
WS7: Theory of Change informed strategy and actions for applying the research findings. Outcomes: During the life of the programme, analysing baseline results and then follow- up of the DETERMIND cohort over 3 years, we will establish evidence on current ser- vices and practice. DETERMIND will deliver novel, detailed data on inequalities in dementia care and what drives positive and negative outcomes and costs for people with dementia and carers, and identify factors that help or hinder living well with dementia.

KE YWOR DS
Dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, inequalities, inequities, ethnicity, gender, deprivation, caregiving, cost of care, services, diagnosis, LGBT+, decision-making, self-funding
1Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
2Social Policy Research Unit, University of York, York, UK
3Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
4Personal Social Services Research Unit, London School of Economics and Political
Science, London, UK
5School of Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK
6Institute for Ageing, Newcastle University, Newcastle, UK
7Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, London, UK
8South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
9Faculty of Health, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK

Correspondence
Sube. Banerjee, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9RY.
Email: [email protected]

Funding information
Economic and Social Research Council (UK) and the National Institute for Health Research (UK), Grant/Award Number: ES/ S010351/1; King’s College; Maudsley NHS
Foundation Trust; National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre and Dementia Biomedical Research Unit

Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2019;1–12.
wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/gps
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

1
Key points

⦁ The experiences of living with dementia and accessing health and social care services post-diagnosis are differ- ent for everyone.
⦁ Certain populations may be disadvantaged due to multi- ple social determinants including age, ethnicity, place of residence and sexual orientation.
⦁ A more nuanced understanding of the inequalities and barriers that can arise during the post-diagnostic care journey, and their impact on the quality of life for people with dementia and their carers is required.
⦁ This information will inform policy and practice and so ensure support services are accessible and able to maximise good quality of life for everyone affected by dementia.
| INTRODUCTION

What is it that enables one family to live well with dementia and another with ostensibly the same illness and challenges to have much poorer experiences? Which groups have better or worse outcomes fol- lowing diagnosis of dementia and why are there inequalities in care and outcomes? What can we learn from the experiences of people with dementia and their carers to deliver care and support that maxi- mises quality of life for all? Health and social care services play vital roles in sustaining the independence and quality of life of people with dementia and their carers.1 Services may not, however, reach everyone who needs them due to barriers associated with availability, accessibil- ity and acceptability.1 Such barriers are likely to affect some groups more than others who, as a result, may experience unmet need, which in turn is known to adversely affect quality of life for people with dementia and carers.2,3 Since disadvantaged groups have a higher risk of developing dementia,4 it is especially important to identify the extent of inequities in service access and to understand how best to address these (we use the term inequity to refer to an inequality that is likely to be seen as unfair). Existing evidence is limited in quantity and scope. Studies have found that certain groups of people with dementia and carers experience poorer service access, including those who are non-white or with lower formal education, socio-economic status or income.2,5-8 However, existing studies largely focus on healthcare6,7,9 and are cross-sectional.2,5 A small number of qualitative studies identify barriers to accessing dementia care, including poor knowledge, poor/inappropriate service provision and impact of cultural beliefs and previous experiences.10-12 This body of evidence is pre- dominantly descriptive, with insufficient attention to understanding causes and processes.13 Public Health England, for example, recently recommended that “qualitative research into the differential access of health services by different ethnic groups mediated by different cul- tural beliefs is needed” and that “these studies should include the iden- tification of barriers and enablers for those communities”.8, p26

In DETERMIND we will seek to go beyond a simple input-output model of dementia care (here is a service, people get it, and here are the outcomes) and instead unpick causal chains and build understanding of contextual factors. We will focus on modifiable mediating factors that generate unequal access and experiences, leading to inequities in outcome. DETERMIND therefore addresses inequalities in care provi- sion and outcomes. DETERMIND focusses on the determinants of qual- ity of life, other outcomes and costs for people with dementia and their carers in the three years following diagnosis. It will investigate inequities and inequalities in care provision and outcomes, their causes, and their links to individual circumstances, including health and social care needs and strengths. It is designed to generate unique data that will advance social research theory and health and care practice.

2 | AIMS AND OBJECTIVES

Our overall aim is to explore and understand inequalities in dementia care and what drives good and poor quality of life, outcomes and
costs for people with dementia and their carers following diagnosis. We will investigate how outcomes and costs vary by content and time of diagnosis, individual circumstances and with varying support from health and social care services. To do this we have designed a pro- gramme of research with seven complementary workstreams (WS). The specific aim of the seven WS are:
WS1: Generate the infrastructure and data needed for
DETERMIND by recruiting a new cohort of 900 people with dementia and their carers in the six months following diagnosis, from three geo- graphically and socially diverse sites, and following them up annually for three years.
WS2: Provide new evidence on the extent of inequalities in
access to dementia care, unmet need for care, barriers and facilitators to accessing care and impact of unmet need over time in a longitudinal context.
WS3: Identify relationships between use and costs of services
and outcomes for people with dementia and carers.
WS4: Investigate the experience of people with dementia and their carers as self-funders of care and to compare this and their out- comes and costs with non-self-funders.
WS5: Develop a deeper, mechanistic understanding of the pro- cesses involved in, and factors influencing, self-regulation and decision-making by people with dementia and carers.
WS6: Investigate the impacts of earlier or later diagnosis and sub- sequent provision of peridiagnostic and post diagnostic treatment and care on quality of life and other outcomes for people with dementia and their carers.
WS7: Co-ordinate findings from the WSs so the data generated can be translated into strategies and actions capable of bringing about better systems and services for people with dementia and carers.
Figure 1 provides an overview of the DETERMIND research programme.
Overview of the DETERMIND programme of research

3 | METHODS

Overview DETERMIND will establish a bespoke cohort of people newly diagnosed with dementia from whom longitudinal survey and qualitative data will be gathered. We will use those data in seven com- plementary WSs designed to test specific hypotheses covering five of the most important information gaps in dementia care: (a) inequalities in access to care [WS2]; (b) costs and outcomes and the relationship between them [WS3]; (c) self-funding of social care [WS4];
(d) decision-making [WS5]; and (e) effect of diagnosis, including differ- ential effect of earlier and later diagnosis [WS6]. We will take these data and formulate actions to address inequalities in care in an inclu- sive process using Theory of Change (ToC) methodology in collabora- tion with the Alzheimer’s Society.

3.1 | WS1: Establishment and follow-up of the DETERMIND cohort

3.1.1 | Research questions

WS1 generates the infrastructure within which WS2-WS6 are con- ducted. Each WS has its own detailed research questions. WS1 will be judged against process indicators (i.e. recruitment of 300 participants in each centre in one year, follow ups completed each year).

3.1.2 | Method

We will recruit, from three sites across England enrolling people from a range of social and economic backgrounds (South East England, South East London, North East England), a large (n = 900) cohort of people diagnosed with dementia in the previous six months prior to interview. This baseline sample size will enable a difference over time between two subgroups in measures such as the EQ 5D of 0.042 or in DEMQoL of
2.24 to be ascertained with power of 0.8 at 5% confidence level. This is on the basis that the annual attrition rate of the sample is 10% and that
the subgroups are of equal size. If the attrition rate is 15%, a difference of 2.44 in DEMQOL could be determined (with 80% power at 5% signif- icance) and if the size of the two groups is in a 3:1 ratio, a difference of
2.59 in DEMQOL could be established. For three groups (three pairwise comparisons), a difference of 3.16 in DEMQOL could be ascertained.
We wish our sample to be representative of all people diagnosed with dementia so we will recruit without exclusion criteria. We will include people in any household situation; they will be primarily defined by having a diagnosis of dementia made in one of the Memory Assess- ment Services (MAS) or other services where a diagnosis of dementia may be made. We estimate that up to 10% may have no identifiable family or paid carer able to act as an informant for the carer-rated instruments, but we will include them in the cohort, subject to informed or proxy consent being obtained, since not having an identifiable carer may be an important influence on the outcomes we are studying.
We will follow-up participants annually for three years embed- ding qualitative work outlined in WS2-WS6. This allows us to look in detail retrospectively at processes leading up to diagnosis and the diagnostic process itself, and prospectively at outcomes and services used in the three years following diagnosis. Although we estimate two-thirds of participants will have dementia of mild severity (sMMSE 20+) and a third moderate (sMMSE 10-20), we will not exclude people with severe dementia. We also envisage that there will be a substan- tial incidence of events of interest, with 5 to 15% per year entering care homes, high rates of transition from no-help to home care, and over half with general hospital admissions.

Participants will be drawn primarily from MAS in the three sites chosen to enable exploration of key attributes in our WSs. The South East England site draws from MASs serving areas with high self- funding, and areas with a high south Asian older population (e.g. Crawley/Woking) and the oldest LGBTQ+ population in the UK (Brighton). The South East London site includes the inner city and sizeable older black Caribbean and south Asian populations, and North East England white working class and rural-dwelling older adults. There are important limitations to the random or population- based sampling in terms of yielding recruits from black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) groups and those from LGBTQ+ populationsbecause of the relatively small numbers we will have, even with an overall sample size of 900. We will therefore oversample black African Caribbean and South Asian populations in South East England and South East London. We will aim for 25% of participants from these areas to be from BAME groups, yielding 150 participants for quantita- tive analyses. Although the heterogeneity within the group may be a challenge, when possible, we will use the multiple group approach (e.g. available in Mplus). This approach makes it possible to simulta- neously analyse relatively small subgroups of unequal sample sizes. For the LGBTQ+ group, even with the concentrated population in Brigh- ton, we will not have the numbers for definitive quantitative analyses; therefore we will also oversample this group and expect to identify 50 participants in our cohort. These numbers in the BAME and LGBTQ
+ groups will allow us to sample purposively for the embedded qualita- tive studies, and we believe that there will be much novel, important and useful data on inequalities and outcomes that will come from these analyses, including areas for further specific investigation.

Complementary recruitment strategies will be used to ensure that we are as inclusive as possible, particularly for those who may have been lost within the healthcare system, and those who were not offered opportunity to participate in the research from a healthcare professional. This includes the use of local “opt-in” case registers at South East London14 and North East England and “opt-out” case regis- ters in South East England, Join Dementia Research (https://www. joindementiaresearch.nihr.ac.uk/), and self-referrals via posters or flyers. Following referral and consent, researchers will ask participants to com- plete a series of questionnaires that will last up to 120 minutes. The per- son with dementia and their carer (if applicable) will both complete the assessment. One option will be for these assessments to occur in tan- dem (with two researchers visiting together) and so reduce the length of time testing and respondent burden. Such a strategy has worked well in the MODEM study.15 Participants will then be contacted annually (for three years) to arrange follow-up visits. The assessments will include quantitative questionnaires to assess patient quality of life, cognitive function, patient neuropsychiatric symptoms, carer quality of life, carer burden, use of services, 7patient activities of daily living, medication, and physical illnesses (see Table 1 for an overview of all baseline mea- sures). Participants will also provide consent for researchers to access their medical records so that we are able to ascertain further details about their pathways to diagnosis and subsequent health care use. Par- ticipants have the option to be contacted about future research studies, and for their details to be shared with NHS Digital so that the research team can be notified upon their death. Qualitative interviews will be offered to a subset of participants, as set out in other WSs, enabling us to elicit a better understanding of complex issues.

3.2 | WS2: Inequalities in use of dementia care

3.2.1 | Research questions

Examining the extent and nature of inequalities will be preliminary to studying key questions around why some subgroups experience
different access to care and support, what the barriers and facilitators are in the care pathways, and to generate grounded ideas for addressing inequities of access. We will address the following research questions:

i. How far are there inequalities of access to dementia care, includ- ing social care as well as health care?
ii. How far do these inequalities entail unmet need for care?
iii. Which subgroups experience unmet need and how do the unmet needs change over time?
iv. Why do inequities in access to care and consequent unmet need occur, what barriers and facilitators do people experience and how can groups that are disadvantaged in this way be best enabled to access support they need?
v. What are the consequences of unmet need for people with dementia and their carers?

3.2.2 | Method

Use of longitudinal, observational data is a powerful approach to investigate natural processes and what shapes them over time. Although this type of approach lacks experimental control over the environment, it allows studying the individual in a natural setting sur- rounded by meaningful contextual factors, which leads to a richer view of the interplay between the individuals and significant others and the systems around them, and leads to better generalizability of the findings to real-world settings. Repeated measures also make it possible to adjust for initial levels of needs and access, identify differ- ent patterns of change, and explore the interplay between changes in different processes. Such observational data, can usefully be further explored using qualitative methods, to allow investigation of underly- ing mechanisms and people’s first-hand perceptions and experiences, and to increase theoretical validity. To provide a comprehensive anal- ysis of the causes and impacts of inequity in access to health and care services for people with dementia and their carers, as well as to iden- tify practical and effective solutions, it is therefore important we explore equity of access from various perspectives using both quanti- tative and qualitative methods.
In WS2, we will use a mixed methods design comprising
(a) statistical analyses of existing datasets, (b) statistical analyses of new DETERMIND cohort longitudinal survey data, and (c) qualitative interviews of DETERMIND cohort members. We will focus on inequalities by ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, socioeconomic status and area type (urban/rural). In quantitative ana- lyses, we will examine variation between groups in access to unpaid care provided by family and friends, to publicly and privately funded social care (residential and community care), and to different forms of health care. We will examine unmet need in terms of self-reported unmet need and self-reported disability (in particular activities of daily living limitations) among people not receiving care. We will consider quality of life using EQ-5D, DEMQOL and ONS4. There are three stages to this process.

Measure Description Ref
TA BL E 1 Baseline measures for DETERMIND
Assessment Toolkit for Dementia with Lewy Bodies A 15-item toolkit that aims to facilitate a diagnosis of dementia with Lewy 24
bodies
Basic Psychological Need Satisfaction and Frustration Scale (BPNSF) A 24-item questionnaire to measure addresses both need satisfaction and frustration in general in one’s life 25
Brief COPE A 28-item measure of coping with life stressors 26
Bristol Activities of Daily Living (BADL) A 20-item question of activities of daily living 27
Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) A 16-item checklist of common comorbidities 28
Cognitive Failures Questionnaire (CFQ) 25 items to assess the frequency people experience cognitive failures 29
Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR) A brief measure of dementia severity 30
Client Service Receipt Inventory (CSRI) A well-established instrument for the assessment of direct and indirect costs of illness. The measure includes participant demographics, support provided and 31
care planning

Decision-Making Involvement Scale (DMI) 15 item scale providing a direct measure of a person with dementia’s reported 32
C-DEMQOL
A 30-item questionnaire to assess quality of life in family carers of people with 33
dementia
engagement in the decision-making process
DEMQOL 28-item interviewer-administered questionnaire answered by the individual with 34 dementia, dementia specific health-related quality of life measure

DEMQOL-Proxy
31-item interviewer-administered questionnaire answered by the caregiver on 34
the individual with dementia, dementia specific health-related quality of life measure

Emotion Regulation of Others and Self extrinsic subscale (EROS)
A 9-item questionnaire individual differences in the use of strategies to improve 35 and to worsen one’s own and other people’s affect
EuroQol (EQ 5D-5L) A 5-item, self-report questionnaire on generic health related quality of life 36
IDEAL study questionnaire A self-created questionnaire on planning for the future and the relationship between the person with dementia and carer
Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R) 22-item questionnaire that quantified the frequency of intrusive thoughts and 37
avoidance behaviours associated with stressful events. The scale has been adapted to specifically relate to the diagnosis of dementia
Life Orientation Test-Revised (LOTR) A 10-item measure of optimism vs pessimism 38
Lubben Social Networks Scale A 6-item version to assess social engagement. 39
Modified Differential Emotions Scale (mDES) A 20-item measure of discrete emotions, both positive and negative 40
Multiple Group Memberships Scale (MGM) A 4-item scale measuring subjective multiple group memberships 41
Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) Brief rating scale to record presence of behavioural and psychiatric symptoms in dementia 42
ONS4 A four item questionnaire of personal well-being 43
Selection, Optimization and Compensation scale (SOC) A 12-item questionnaire to assess selection, optimization and compensation 44
Single Item Self-esteem Scale A single item measure of self-esteem 45
Spontaneous Self-affirmation Measure (SSAM) A 10-item measure of self-affirmation 46
Standardized Mini-mental State Examination (sMMSE) A brief, global measure of cognitive function 47
Trail Making Task (TMT) A neuropsychological test to measure executive function, visual attention, task switching and inhibition 48
Zarit Carer Burden Inventory—Short Form (ZCBI) A 12-item scale to measure carer burden 49Stage 1 (months 1 to 24): We will complete secondary analyses of data from the MODEM study,15 the English Longitudinal Survey of Ageing (ELSA),16 and the Cognitive Function and Ageing Study (CFAS).17 The MODEM cohort includes 300 people with dementia and their carers quota-sampled to balance mild, moderate and severe dementia, followed up one year later: it allows us to examinedifferences by gender and socioeconomic group in receipt of care and support among a mixed convenience sample of people with different dementia severities. ELSA analyses of waves 6 to 8, which contain detailed longitudinal data on needs and characteristics, receipt of unpaid and paid care and cognitive tests and proxy interviews on cog- nitive change (but not diagnoses of dementia) will enable us toidentify, for those at earlier stages of cognitive decline, the level of and change in unmet needs and their socioeconomic correlates, and how these affect access to care and outcomes such as probability of entering a care home and quality of life. CFAS will allow us to explore a limited number of service use and demographic variables in an epi- demiologically generalisable group of well characterised people with dementia. We will run descriptive analyses for the key outcomes (quality of life of people with dementia and their carers), and interme- diate factors (unmet needs, social network, care by family and friends, publicly and privately funded social care including residential and community care, health care and cost of social care) by cognitive func- tioning (ELSA) and mild, moderate and severe dementia (MODEM) and inequality indicators (gender, marital status, socioeconomic status and type of area [urban/rural]). We will also examine changes over time in outcomes, intermediate factors and cognition/dementia. We will then analyse how the patterns of change in cognition, unmet needs, receipt of services and outcomes are shaped by inequality indi- cators using latent growth curves.

Stage 2 (months 25 to 36): We will conduct quantitative analyses of the first wave of the new DETERMIND cohort data and, on the basis of the findings, develop detailed plans for stage three. We will first carry out descriptive analyses of the first wave on the quality of life, receipt of health and social care, (un)met needs and social net- works by severity of dementia and inequality indicators. Our analyses of services received will include sources of funding for care including personal funds to provide key descriptive data for WS4. We will describe differences in receipt of health and social care between sub- groups by ethnicity, gender, marital status, sexuality, socioeconomic status and urban/rural area, controlling for differences in needs and dementia severity. We will examine to what extent identified sub- groups receiving less care experience or perceive unmet need for care. We will then compare the quality of life of those experiencing unmet needs with those not experiencing unmet needs controlling for other factors. For these analyses, we will use multivariate modelling suitable for binary, ordinal and continuous outcomes, such as generalized lin- ear models. Latent class analysis will identify subgroups characterised by similar needs, strengths and service access patterns (typologies; cross-sectionally) and investigate potential facilitating factors associ- ated with these patterns.
Stage 3 (months 37 to 60): Through analyses of successive waves of the DETERMIND cohort we will examine whether inequalities in unmet need and receipt of services at baseline persist over time, whether unmet need at baseline and accumulation of unmet needs over time are associated with lower quality of life for people with dementia and their carers, and what processes might facilitate better outcomes over time. We will provide descriptions of trends in key var- iables from successive waves of the DETERMIND cohort for WS4-WS6. We will analyse how the differences in receipt of care between the different subgroups change over successive waves and how they are associated with differences in unmet need, costs of care and outcomes including quality of life. At 3-year follow-up we will use Latent Change Score to analyse whether the level or change in one factor affects the subsequent change in another factor. This is a
strong method for investigating causality in observational studies (e.g. a facilitator improves access to care which in turn improves qual- ity of life).

Qualitative work: In-depth, face-to-face qualitative interviews with people with dementia and their carers (N = 40-60) will be under- taken to examine experiences and underlying mechanisms, focusing on the most compelling and potentially productive questions emerging from quantitative analyses. These questions will be identified and refined through the theory of change workshops (WS7), with a focus on key subgroups identified in the quantitative research as disadvan- taged in terms of their access to dementia care and support. To address these questions, in-depth interviews will be conducted with a purposively (theoretically) selected sub-sample of people with demen- tia and their carers. Our strategy, for each sub-group, will be to com- pare those experiencing poor access and unmet need and those who, despite being part of this disadvantaged sub-group, do not experience poor access and unmet need. This will allow us to explore not just bar- riers but also what facilitates access and protective factors. Within this, we will explore people’s perceptions and experiences: for exam- ple, how they perceive their need for support, alternative and informal sources of support, experiences of “help-seeking”, and the impacts of unmet need. We will aim to include “less heard” groups in dementia research who, even in our cohort, may be low in frequency, such as those who identify as LGBTQ+ and those with young-onset dementia.

3.3 | WS3: Relationship between use and cost of services and outcomes for people with dementia and carers

3.3.1 | Research questions

1. How much do increases in service use lead to improvements in outcomes?
2. What are the relationships between costs of care and outcomes?
3. Do unmet needs have negative consequences on outcomes?
4. Do the relationships between service use and outcomes vary according to characteristics of the person with dementia and carer?

3.3.2 | Method

Detailed data on receipt of unpaid care and use of services will be col- lected in WS1 using the CSRI. Services will include primary and sec- ondary health care, residential and community-based social care, special housing, aids and adaptations, technology and support for carers. We will estimate costs of services by applying unit costs from the latest PSSRU unit cost report18 and the opportunity costs of unpaid care by applying wage rates for hours of personal care and national living wage for hours of other care and supervision. Many people in the first three years after diagnosis will have mild dementia with relatively little functional disability, but are likely to go froindependence to service use within the life of the cohort. Others will develop moderate or in some cases severe dementia within three years of diagnosis. All will receive at least some services and most will receive unpaid care. It is important that services promote continued independence, offer choice, are well co-ordinated and provide suffi- cient care and support to maintain good quality of life for the person with dementia and carers. Detailed data on outcomes for people with dementia will also be collected in WS1. Our main outcomes in ana- lyses of these data will be quality of life for the person with dementia (DEMQOL, DEMQOL-Proxy, EQ 5D, ONS4) and for carers (C- DEMQOL, EQ 5D, ONS4). For some analyses DEMQOL-Proxy, DEMQOL and EQ 5D will be converted into QALYs using societal weights. We will also examine intermediate outcomes: for people with dementia these will include functional disability, social participation, remaining in the community (not entering residential care), and not experiencing avoidable hospital admission or delayed discharge from hospital; and for carers these will include carer stress, social participa- tion and health.

Stage 1 (months 1 to 24): We will analyse data from the MODEM study cohort of 300 people with dementia and their carers, in parallel with our analyses of these data in WS2. We will examine in particular the association between service use and costs of care in wave 1 of the MODEM cohort with outcomes at wave 2 and changes in out- comes between waves 1 and 2 controlling for the needs and charac- teristics of the person with dementia. Findings from these analyses will not only provide some initial evidence and insight to answer the research questions but importantly will test the strategy to be used for analysing data from the new DETERMIND cohort.

Stage 2 (months 25 to 36): We will conduct quantitative analyses of the first wave of the new DETERMIND cohort data and, on the basis of the findings, refine our plans for stage 3. We will conduct regression analyses to examine (a) the relationships at baseline between outcomes and service inputs and their costs; (b) variations in this relationship by social determinants such as gender, marital status and socio-economic status; and (c) the variation in use of services and costs between people with differing levels of cognition and functional disability, controlling for individual characteristics.

Stage 3 (months 37 to 60): We will examine how care packages and their costs at successive waves of the cohort are associated with out- comes at different points in time (RQs 1 and 2) and how this relationship varies with the personal characteristics of the person with dementia and carer (RQ4). We will study how unmet needs in earlier waves affect out- comes in later waves (RQ3) and how this relationship varies with the characteristics of the person with dementia and carer (RQ4). Longitudinal analyses will examine influences on outcomes at different time-points.

3.3.3 | Statistical methods

In all stages, we will first conduct descriptive analyses to investigate the characteristics of people in the sample and understand how differ- ent variables are correlated. To understand the relationships between outcome and costs, in stages 1 and 2, we plan to build linear
regression models. The dependent variables will be the quality of life of older people living with dementia and the immediate outcomes outlined above. The key independent variables are the use of care services, unmet needs and costs of care.
Drawing on the rich information in the MODEM (see WS2) and DETERMIND datasets, we will control for demographic characteristics (age, gender, ethnicity), social support network (marital status, living arrangements, number of children), care needs and strengths (severity of dementia, self-reported health, and number of chronic diseases) and socioeconomic status (income, education, and housing tenure). We will calculate robust standard errors to take account of the heteroskedastic data and make valid statistical inferences. We will conduct post-estimation diagnostics to make sure that our models are correctly specified and to minimise any bias in our estimates. In stage 3, we will build multi-level linear regression models and latent growth curve models. Drawing on a longitudinal dataset, a multilevel design has two further advantages. First, it accounts for the unobserved individual-level heterogeneity which may lead to biased regression results. Second, by including a time variable, random intercept and random slope (coefficient) in the models allows us to examine trajec- tories of quality of life and immediate outcomes over time and so understand better the important factors that alter these trajectories.

3.4 | WS4: Experience of self-funders of care

3.4.1 | Research questions

1. What are self-funders’ experiences of navigating care systems and arranging care post-dementia diagnosis?
2. What are the patterns of self-funders’ journeys over time, and how do these differ from those of people funded by councils?
3. How do interactions with key people and services affect self- funders’ choices and decision-making over time?
4. What are the socio-demographic characteristics of self-funders, and what role do particular characteristics such as age, sexuality and ethnicity play in decision-making and experiences of care and support?
5. What social science theories facilitate understanding of self- funders’ experiences?

3.4.2 | Method

WS4 will investigate the experiences of people with dementia and carers who are presented with the challenges and opportunities of self-funding. We will initially identify, using economic characteristics, those in our DETERMIND cohort who are likely to become self- or council-funded (WS1), and follow them up to explore differences in costs and outcomes quantitatively, the decisions that they make, when they make them and the relationship with subsequent transi- tions in care. We will examine difference in patterns between self- and council-funded individuals (e.g. falling back on council
funding when personal resources are depleted). We will identify those starting home care and making transitions into care homes, exploring these processes in detail through in-depth qualitative interviews with peo- ple with dementia and their carers. Interviews will also explore inter- actions with service providers, councils, family, friends and carers, and sources of information such as the internet, plus experiences of choice and control, especially at key transitions between services or sectors. WS4 will yield valuable data via complementary quantitative and qualitative approaches interfacing with WS5 developments on individual characteristics that determine choice and effective use of that choice and WS6 in the effects of services over time.

Through semi-structured interviews we will explore experiences and issues of information-need and seeking, reassurance and confi- dence in decision-making as well as the dynamic journey through the condition in relation to care and funding for self-funders living with dementia. The topic guide will ensure consistency, but the format will be flexible to allow participants to generate naturalistic data on what they constitute as important and/or successful in terms of outcomes. It is anticipated that an initial sample of 30 people with dementia and/or their carers will be selected from baseline data, with 10 followed up at two time points (12 and 24 m). A further 20 selected from discussions with other work streams to target arising points for further exploration will be selected from 12-month follow-up data and followed up (at 24 and 36 m). Sampling will be driven from two perspectives: (a) purposive sampling to achieve maximum variation addressing gender, ethnicity, living circumstances, funding, levels of care need, impact of dementia; and (b) to further explore questions informed by interim analyses emerging from the cohort data.

3.5 | WS5: Understanding decision-making by people with dementia and carers

The principal research question addressed by WS5 is:
Do individual differences in self-regulation predict differences in outcomes (e.g., decision-making, quality of life, well-being) over time?

3.5.1 | Method

The basic assumption underlying analyses in WS5 is that individuals’ self- regulatory and decision-making competencies following a diagnosis of dementia vary, and thus different people will show different response tra- jectories, and benefit from different support. Consistent with the notion of precision medicine, the ultimate goal is to understand how best to sup- port decision-making for the best personal outcome, optimally using the resources available. We will first explore how differences in key elements related to decision-making competencies (understood through core aspects of self-regulation: emotion regulation, cognitive control, self- reflection) impact upon various outcomes such as well-being and quality of life and how this changes with disease progression. We will examine how standardized measures of the core aspects of self-regulation (e.g. emotion regulation: mDES, ERQ; cognitive control: Brief COPE; self-
reflection: SSAM, LOT, BPNSF) individually and jointly determine indica- tors of decision making (e.g. CFQ, BADL, DMI, responses to specific decision-making questions embedded in brief COPE, SOC, and BPNSF) and how this can help us to understand individual differences in out- comes (linking with WS3). Disease progression, indexed by sMMSE, NPI, and IES will be included in the model.

Quantitative analyses will include examining cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between variables. These will be sup- plemented by the use
of purposively sampled qualitative interviews with individuals whose trajectories diverged at key decisions to enhance our understanding of decision making processes and their impact on outcomes. For WS5, a key focus will be on the role of emo- tion regulation, an important but poorly understood predictor of out- comes in both people with dementia and carers.19,20 The combined insights from qualitative and quantitative data will allow us to develop grounded hypotheses to inform the development of mechanistic models of decision making and to move towards the development of empirically grounded behavioural interventions.

3.6 | WS6: Effect of diagnostic stage and services on outcomes

3.6.1 | Research questions

1. How do outcomes for people with dementia and their carers vary by diagnosis at earlier/later stages of the disorder?
2. What diagnostic service characteristics predict better and worse outcomes?
3. How do outcomes for people with dementia and carers vary by differing peridiagnostic and post-diagnostic care?

3.6.2 | Method

The interviews will include at baseline a direct assessment of severity of dementia at diagnosis from MAS notes, MMSE score and Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR), a four-point global staging of dementia (0.5 = minimal, 1 = mild, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe). We will define “earlier” as CDR = 0.5 and 1 and “later” as CDR = 2 and 3 at diagnosis. We will also at baseline ascertain the date of onset (6 m period) of first symp- toms of dementia and date and pathway to diagnosis including a ret- rospective assessment of service receipt up to diagnosis, so allowing an assessment of time to diagnosis from emergence of the dementia. Illness trajectory to diagnosis will be ascertained by time from first symptoms to diagnosis and CDR stage at diagnosis. We will prospec- tively record the offers and use of post diagnostic health and social care services over the three year follow up period.
Quantitative analyses will focus on assessing the impact of ear- lier/later diagnosis of dementia, service characteristics, and subse- quent care on outcomes, identifying predictors of good/bad outcomes. For example, in the earlier/later stage diagnosis analyses, adjusting for patient characteristics, the specific hypotheses to betested will include whether there are clinically significant differences between those diagnosed earlier compared with later at 12/24/36 m in: (a) person with dementia HRQL (DEMQOL/DEMQOL-Proxy) higher by 4 points; (b) comprehensive costs (CSRI) lower;
(c) emotional impact of diagnosis (IES) lower; (d) carer burden (CBI) lower; (e) carer quality of life (EQ-5D and C-DEMQOL) higher. In the first stage of the analyses, descriptive statistics will characterise the samples at baseline. Our primary analysis will be a multiple linear regression model with DEMQOL-Proxy as outcome, baseline DEMQOL-Proxy as covariate, and stage at diagnosis as our main covariate. We will adjust for other possible confounders at baseline. We will use similar models for secondary outcomes. Stage will be defined primarily as a binary variable (CDR earlier = 0.5 and 1, later = 2 and 3) in secondary analyses this will be examined as an ordered cate- gorical variable (0.5/1/2/3). The final analysis will model all outcomes (12/24/36 m) in a mixed effects model using the same covariates. DEMQOL-Proxy is our primary outcome, dementia is progressive and DEMQOL-Proxy has good psychometric properties across the range of dementia severity.

To complement and contextualise the quantitative data we will com- plete in-depth interviews with people with dementia and carers from the cohort to capture different narratives of “how” and “why” things happen at diagnosis and after, and how these affect quality of life and other out- comes. These interviews will provide an understanding of the impacts and outcomes of diagnosis on patients and carers over time. Specifically, they enable us to explore how variation by earlier or later diagnosis and post-diagnostic care, including how services and the diagnostic process are perceived, enhance or impair quality of life. These interviews will explore post-diagnosis expectations and experiences that endure, what changes and what, over time, ceases to be an issue. A maximum variation sample will be drawn to ensure inclusion of key characteristics (e.g. ethnicity, living alone) to aid generalisability. Interview guides will be developed with the research team from the literature21,22 and our PPI panel. The framework for interviews and analysis will draw on stress, appraisal and coping theory.23 Based on earlier work we anticipate three broad areas that are likely to be affected by when and how they received their dementia diagnosis: (a) how it affects individuals’ sense of self, rela- tionships and ability to maintain activities that are important to them as active citizens; (b) how it enables them (or not) to adapt and use technol- ogies and existing networks of support; and (c) how it links to the use of information and the ability to connect with and navigate professional sys- tems of support. We will triangulate the complementary quantitative and qualitative data to generate an evidenced framework to help profes- sionals understand better the positive/negative impacts of making a diag- nosis in dementia at differing stages.

3.7 | WS7: Programme management and Theory of Change guided research development, coordination and promotion of impact

We will use Theory of Change to coordinate and co-develop research findings from each of the WSs in order to generate a theoretically
integrated and holistic model of inequities in dementia care. This model will, in turn, help guide our outputs and proposed actions for impact. The development of the theory of change model will be both iterative and collaborative, extending over the course of the project and undertaken in close collaboration with stakeholders, including people with dementia, carers, practitioners, commissioners and policy makers. Theory of change is particularly well suited to guiding investi- gations into mediating factors in complex systems. The theory of change model will also provide a visual conceptual map of the journey undertaken by people with dementia and carers, covering initial diag- nosis, post-diagnostic care and outcomes of interest, and will clarify how mediating factors explored in WS2-WS6 shape people’s experi- ences, access to support and the outcomes they achieve. Led as a sep- arate WS, we will use this theory-driven framework in four key ways:

i. To coordinate and integrate research processes
ii. To facilitate the conceptually-grounded integration of findings
iii. To facilitate and capture practice insights from stakeholders
iv. To guide and support stakeholder engagement approaches, com- munication, influencing and co-production strategies

3.7.1 | Method

Phase 1 (months 3 to 9): We will organise two initial theory of change workshops; each will introduce, develop and refine an initial theory of change model to establish a clear, shared starting point. One of these workshops, for the research teams, will be used to clarify relevant the- oretical and conceptual frameworks (relevant to the overall model and/or specific aspects of it) and to represent these appropriately (as, if necessary, provisionally) in the model, making clear how they inform research questions, hypotheses, assumptions and/or interpretive frameworks. Research questions and approaches will be honed in light of these discussions and clear objectives for each WS will be established. For our second workshop, we will identify key national stakeholders, with the help of our academic partners, Alzheimer’s Society and other health and care partners. We will share the evolving theory of change model and seek input and insights to inform it as a whole and to help develop ideas within specific WSs. We will also use these discussions to begin to identify contextually feasible goals, out- puts and pathways to effect necessary changes in practice. In addition to the workshops, we will conduct six face-to-face qualitative inter- views with senior staff from local service providers in the areas that our cohort is drawn from to provide the project team with further rel- evant context; the content of these interviews will be determined dur- ing the workshops.
Phase 2 (months 18, 30 and 42): We will reconvene our researcher and stakeholder groups annually over the next 3 years to develop the overall theory of change model. In these workshops, we will review data and findings to date, clarify how these shape the model and, as needed, further refine and focus the investigations in each WS. We will also use the workshops to review progress using indicators devel- oped as part of the theory of change process, for each WS and theprogramme as a whole. In the workshop held 18 months into the pro- ject, for example, we will review the recruitment of the cohort to tar- get and its characteristics (WS1); and review emerging data from analyses of ELSA, MODEM and CFAS to inform the next stage ana- lyses of the DETERMIND cohort (WS2, WS3).
Phase 3 (months 54 to 60): In two further sets of workshops, we will intensively refine and finalise the overall theory of change model so that it adequately reflects findings from each WS, provides an overall conceptual map of ways in which mediating factors influence access, experiences, outcomes and costs and, within this, develop and refine practical proposals for addressing inequities. These proposals will be grounded in empirical, conceptual and theoretical develop- ments and be located clearly within causal pathways. In addition to working with experts, advisors, people with dementia and carers in workshops we will also conduct nine interviews with senior staff from service providers in the areas from which the cohort is drawn to gain additional insights into the model and to “road-test” ideas and pro- posals generated through the theory of change workshop process. Through these activities we will agree the final set of conclusions, rec- ommendations and actions.

4 | DETERMIND PPI AND ETHICAL PROCESSES

4.1 | PPI process

Margaret Dangoor (MD), an expert by experience of being a family carer for two people with dementia over a 20-year period and is active in the dementia and carer community, is a full applicant on this proposal and has been involved in all stages of the research. The Alzheimer’s Society supports this programme and has agreed to work with us as an integral element of our PPI strategy and in WS7 throughout the programme. Pre-study PPI consultation identified sen- sitivities for carers, reflecting on different experiences of diagnosis and post-diagnostic support. Group members identified the need for interviewers to be aware of and trained for the emotional impact of interviews. The group reinforced the need to ensure that recruitment represents a diverse population.

Our PPI lead MD has set up a Reference Group of Users and Carers (RGUC) of about 10 people, and as noted above, has been involved in all stages of the preparation of our proposal. The RGUC, which will be an evolving group and aim to reflect the diversity of people with dementia and their carers, will meet at least twice in the first year, and then at key points in the project when we are facing key decisions about next steps or about the interpretation of findings. Some members will be asked to join project subgroups. The RGUC will be represented on the project’s Advisory Group. The RGUC will meet throughout the study: prior to ethics submission they will consult on consent and information sheets; they will represent the patient/carer view in recruitment preparation; troubleshoot recruitment issues; col- laborate in the development of frameworks for interviews in the quali- tative elements of the study; and support the interpretation of results
and dissemination to patient and carer groups. Deliberative work- shops will inform interpretation and dissemination of findings.

4.2 | Ethical considerations

Ethical approval for the study has been obtained from The London: Brighton and Sussex Research Ethics Committee (REC 19/LO/0528). Where possible, fully informed written consent will be obtained from people with dementia at entry, carers will give their consent for their own participation. Some people with dementia may lack the mental capacity to give this. The study aims are incompatible with only enter- ing people with mild dementia and capacity. Also we must allow for increasing severity of dementia over time with possible loss of capac- ity. After the study has been explained and information given, all peo- ple with dementia will have capacity assessed by a trained researcher. Agreement to participate will be obtained to their best level of under- standing and recruitment will not proceed if they refuse or show signs of distress. Each participant with dementia, will have a consultee (per- sonal or professional) identified. Where capacity is lacking, their opin- ion will be sought about whether the person with dementia would have chosen to participate if they still had capacity to express a view. They will be asked to sign a consultee declaration. Those assessed as not having the capacity to consent will be enrolled if they show no objection to participation. If the participant loses capacity (assessed each visit) their consultee will be asked to make decisions on their behalf.

5 | CONCLUSION

This is a mixed methods study with integrated and complementary quantitative and qualitative enquiry that seeks to examine and address inequalities in dementia care. The new DETERMIND cohort will facilitate regularly collected quantitative data across the pathway of the journey through dementia from diagnosis. This will be com- bined with qualitative methods to allow in-depth enquiry at regular points, providing the opportunity to systematically interrogate trends from the quantitative data and to generate new hypotheses and insights. We will use “triangulation protocols” at a thematic level and “mixed methods matrices” at the level of individual cases for data integration.
Next steps: It is a major strength of DETERMIND that we can look in detail at the first three years following diagnosis. It is a weakness that much will happen in the next five years after this study has fin- ished its follow-up. Once we have recruited our cohort we will seek further funding to complete five additional waves of follow-up from four to eight years following diagnosis. This would be a very valuable extension

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors would like to thank the people with dementia (and their carers) who have kindly agreed to participate in the DETERMIND
project, and we would like to thank in advance those that will go onto participate in the project in the future. The DETERMIND study was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (UK) and the National Institute for Health Research (UK) through grant number ES/S010351/1. R.S. is part-funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre and Dementia Biomedical Research Unit at South London and Maudsley NHS Foun- dation Trust and King’s College London.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST
None declared.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
Direct access will be granted to authorised representatives from the Sponsor and host institution for monitoring and/or audit of the study to ensure compliance with regulations. All research data will be archived and securely stored for 10 years after the end point of the study. Following the end of the study, anonymised data will also be uploaded to the UK Data Archive online repository. Access to data will be limited to authorised researchers who will agree to the End User License (http://dataarchive.ac.uk/conditions).

ENDNOTE
1 A note on terminology: We use “carer” according to the Carers UK defini- tion: “someone of any age providing unpaid support to family or friends.” “Family carer” is questioned because not all unpaid care is provided by families and “informal carer” because the term “informal” is seen by some carers to belittle their role. We acknowledge concerns with use of the term “carer” in early dementia but we have not used “supporter”, “carer/supporter” or “caregiver” as “carer” was preferred by our PPI group.

ORCID
Nicolas Farina Image https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0635-2547
Ben Hicks Image https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6445-2415
Bo Hu Image https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5256-505X
Jennifer Rusted Image https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1341-6334 Alan Thomas Image https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6667-9533 Raphael Wittenberg Image https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3096-2721

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How to cite this article: Farina N, Hicks B, Baxter K, et al. DETERMinants of quality of life, care and costs, and consequences of INequalities in people with Dementia and their carers (DETERMIND): A protocol paper. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2019;1–12. https://doi.org/10.1002/gps.5246