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About

Dementia Care Aware, developed with the University of California, San Francisco, and originally funded by the California Department of Health Care Services through Senate Bill SB 48, is dedicated to improving dementia care in statewide primary care settings. It provides the education, tools and support necessary to offer high-quality dementia screenings,  assessments  and care, especially for underserved and low-income Californians. 

Our Team

FAQ

Dementia will soon affect 1 in 5 older Californians. Dementia impacts a person’s ability to self-manage their day-to-day activities and other medical conditions.

Detecting dementia early:

  • Allows you to connect the person and their caregivers to resources early
  • Improves quality of life for affected persons and their caregivers
  • Reduces unnecessary costs of care
  • Allows you to start a brain health plan earlier, which can slow progression.

Check out our General Information Flyer to learn more.

The cognitive health assessment is a quick tool that can be completed by different members of a healthcare team. Additionally, it is completely free to the patient, easy to score, uses tools that are validated in primary care and can be done in multiple languages.

The cognitive health assessment process consists of:

  1. Taking a brief patient history, for example, through a question such as “Have you noticed any changes in your memory or thinking abilities this last year?”
  2. Using screening tools. Use validated tools to assess cognition and function, which can be given to the patient or a care partner.
  3. Documenting care partner information. Do a brief assessment of the patient’s support system.

The table below outlines the recommended tools that can be used with the patient or an informant to satisfy the requirements of the CHA:

These videos illustrate the cognitive health assessment in action.

Dementia Care Aware provides a self paced that can be done over time or a monthly webinar training on the cognitive health assessment (CHA). Each offers CME/CE credits. 

  • Providers who take the training are eligible to bill for this assessment for patients 65 and older with Medi-Cal only using code 1494F. 
  • For more information, download our  Cognitive Health Assessment Training Flyer 

All members of the care team can conduct the CHA, but a billing provider must do the final review and documentation. 

An example of a potential team model might be:

  • At check-in, the patient receives a survey that includes a question about memory symptoms.
  • The Medical Assistant assesses function by assessing activities of daily living (ADL) and/or instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) by asking the patient the questions on the functional abilities’ checklist.
  • The Nurse conducts a Mini-Cog with the patient.
  • The Social Worker assesses the patient’s support system and documents it.
  • The primary care provider, a Physician or Advanced Practice Provider, reviews and interprets the results, discusses the results and next steps with the patient, and documents the CHA components. 

The Medicare Annual Wellness Visit includes a requirement for a cognitive impairment initial screening and allows flexibility on the tools providers can use for this screening. The Dementia Care Aware cognitive health assessment may be used as a resource for this screening. If the patient screens positive on the CHA, then a more in-depth evaluation should be done, including the 60-minute face-to-face Cognitive Assessment and Care Planning (see CPT-4 code 99483).

We help providers, health care teams and practices implement the CHA in practice with program offerings that fit your bandwidth:

  • Implementation toolkit: A guide to support primary care teams in implementing routine cognitive screening for adults 65+. It includes practical examples and insights to support quality improvement and change management.
  • Centralized warmline support: 1-800-933-1789 for clinical management or consult questions Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
  • Dementia Care Resources: The Dementia Care Aware resource library contains resources and information to support dementia screening, assessment, care planning, and brain health.
  • Webinars and podcasts: Presentations on a variety of topics to assist with dementia care from screening to care planning and implementing dementia care processes. Each offer FREE CE/CMEs.
  • eCourses: Reinforce your learnings with additional self-paced trainings! Receive FREE .5 CE/CME for each eCourse.

Download our Program Offerings flyer to learn more.

Complete an evaluation survey at the end of the modules to receive a continuing education certificate. Please email us at dca@ucsf.edu if you have any questions or concerns.

About

Dementia Care Aware, developed with the University of California, San Francisco, and originally funded by the California Department of Health Care Services through Senate Bill SB 48, is dedicated to improving dementia care in statewide primary care settings. It provides the education, tools and support necessary to offer high-quality dementia screenings,  assessments  and care, especially for underserved and low-income Californians. 

Our Team

FAQ

Dementia will soon affect 1 in 5 older Californians. Dementia impacts a person’s ability to self-manage their day-to-day activities and other medical conditions.

Detecting dementia early:

  • Allows you to connect the person and their caregivers to resources early
  • Improves quality of life for affected persons and their caregivers
  • Reduces unnecessary costs of care
  • Allows you to start a brain health plan earlier, which can slow progression.

Check out our General Information Flyer to learn more.

The cognitive health assessment is a quick tool that can be completed by different members of a healthcare team. Additionally, it is completely free to the patient, easy to score, uses tools that are validated in primary care and can be done in multiple languages.

The cognitive health assessment process consists of:

  1. Taking a brief patient history, for example, through a question such as “Have you noticed any changes in your memory or thinking abilities this last year?”
  2. Using screening tools. Use validated tools to assess cognition and function, which can be given to the patient or a care partner.
  3. Documenting care partner information. Do a brief assessment of the patient’s support system.

The table below outlines the recommended tools that can be used with the patient or an informant to satisfy the requirements of the CHA:

These videos illustrate the cognitive health assessment in action.

Dementia Care Aware provides a self paced that can be done over time or a monthly webinar training on the cognitive health assessment (CHA). Each offers CME/CE credits. 

  • Providers who take the training are eligible to bill for this assessment for patients 65 and older with Medi-Cal only using code 1494F. 
  • For more information, download our  Cognitive Health Assessment Training Flyer 

All members of the care team can conduct the CHA, but a billing provider must do the final review and documentation. 

An example of a potential team model might be:

  • At check-in, the patient receives a survey that includes a question about memory symptoms.
  • The Medical Assistant assesses function by assessing activities of daily living (ADL) and/or instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) by asking the patient the questions on the functional abilities’ checklist.
  • The Nurse conducts a Mini-Cog with the patient.
  • The Social Worker assesses the patient’s support system and documents it.
  • The primary care provider, a Physician or Advanced Practice Provider, reviews and interprets the results, discusses the results and next steps with the patient, and documents the CHA components. 

The Medicare Annual Wellness Visit includes a requirement for a cognitive impairment initial screening and allows flexibility on the tools providers can use for this screening. The Dementia Care Aware cognitive health assessment may be used as a resource for this screening. If the patient screens positive on the CHA, then a more in-depth evaluation should be done, including the 60-minute face-to-face Cognitive Assessment and Care Planning (see CPT-4 code 99483).

We help providers, health care teams and practices implement the CHA in practice with program offerings that fit your bandwidth:

  • Implementation toolkit: A guide to support primary care teams in implementing routine cognitive screening for adults 65+. It includes practical examples and insights to support quality improvement and change management.
  • Centralized warmline support: 1-800-933-1789 for clinical management or consult questions Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
  • Dementia Care Resources: The Dementia Care Aware resource library contains resources and information to support dementia screening, assessment, care planning, and brain health.
  • Webinars and podcasts: Presentations on a variety of topics to assist with dementia care from screening to care planning and implementing dementia care processes. Each offer FREE CE/CMEs.
  • eCourses: Reinforce your learnings with additional self-paced trainings! Receive FREE .5 CE/CME for each eCourse.

Download our Program Offerings flyer to learn more.

Complete an evaluation survey at the end of the modules to receive a continuing education certificate. Please email us at dca@ucsf.edu if you have any questions or concerns.

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