- Kolanowski, Ann;
- Boltz, Marie;
- Galik, Elizabeth;
- Gitlin, Laura N;
- Kales, Helen C;
- Resnick, Barbara;
- Van Haitsma, Kimberly S;
- Knehans, Amy;
- Sutterlin, Jane E;
- Sefcik, Justine S;
- Liu, Wen;
- Petrovsky, Darina V;
- Massimo, Lauren;
- Gilmore-Bykovskyi, Andrea;
- MacAndrew, Margaret;
- Brewster, Glenna;
- Nalls, Vycki;
- Jao, Ying-Ling;
- Duffort, Naomi;
- Scerpella, Danny
Background
Behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) are prevalent in people with neurodegenerative diseases.Purpose
In this scoping review the Kales, Gitlin and Lykestos framework is used to answer the question: What high quality evidence exists for the patient, caregiver and environmental determinants of five specific BPSD: aggression, agitation, apathy, depression and psychosis?Method
An a priori review protocol was developed; 692 of 6013 articles retrieved in the search were deemed eligible for review. Gough's Weight of Evidence Framework and the Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias were used. The findings from 56 high quality/low bias articles are summarized.Discussion
Each symptom had its own set of determinants, but many were common across several symptoms: neurodegeneration, type of dementia, severity of cognitive impairments, and declining functional abilities, and to a lesser extent, caregiver burden and communication.Conclusion
Research and policy implications are relevant to the National Plan to Address Alzheimer's Disease.