RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Care trajectories before and after a first diagnosis of dementia in patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorders JF The Annals of Family Medicine JO Ann Fam Med FD American Academy of Family Physicians SP 5571 DO 10.1370/afm.22.s1.5571 VO 21 IS Supplement 3 A1 Dufour, Isabelle A1 Courteau, Josiane A1 Vedel, Isabelle A1 Brodeur, Sébastien A1 Quesnel-Vallee, Amelie YR 2023 UL http://www.annfammed.org/content/21/Supplement_3/5571.abstract AB Context: A first diagnosis of dementia further complexifies the healthcare needs of older adults living with severe mental illness. While these individuals have complex healthcare needs and are at higher risk of cognitive impairments, there is no evidence of how their patterns of healthcare use vary over time around the dementia diagnosis.Objective: We aimed to explore the care trajectories (CTs) of older adults living with severe mental illness one year before and one year after a first dementia diagnosis.Study Design and Analysis This is a retrospective cohort study using an innovative multidimensional state sequence analysis approach to develop a typology of CTs.Dataset We used health administrative data from the Quebec (Canada) provincial health insurance board (1996- 2016).Population Studied The cohort included all patients aged 65 years and older who received a first diagnosis of dementia (index date) in 2014-2016 and were previously diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.Outcome Measures We measured CTs according to 1) healthcare settings (e.g., hospital, emergency department, clinic); 2) reasons for healthcare use (e.g., dementia, other mental and non-mental diagnoses), and 3) healthcare professionals (e.g., dementia specialists, psychiatrists, home care professionals).Results A total of 3,868 patients were categorized into seven distinct types of CTs. Type 1 (47.6%) showed the lowest healthcare use and comorbidities. Type 2 (9.9%) and type 3 (63.0%) showed high healthcare and home care use after dementia diagnosis. A high comorbidity and stable healthcare use characterized type 4 (10.3%). Type 5 (9.0%) comprised younger individuals with the highest intensity of mental health-related and psychiatric consultations. Type 6 (10.9%) and type 7 (5.9%) presented a high home care use pattern for non-mental reasons before the dementia diagnosis. The year after, type 6 showed the highest long-term care (37.1%) and death (48.5%) rates, while they remained lower for type 7.Conclusions Our innovative approach provides a unique insight into the complex healthcare patterns of people living with serious mental illness and dementia. It provides an avenue to support data-driven decision-making by highlighting fragility areas in the allocation of care resources.