Chodosh, JoshuaFowler, Nicole R.Perkins, Anthony J.Connor, Karen I.Messina, FrankBoustani, MalazBorson, Soo2025-06-182025-06-182025Chodosh J, Fowler NR, Perkins AJ, et al. Program of intensive support in emergency departments for care partners of cognitively impaired patients: A randomized controlled trial. Alzheimers Dement. 2025;21(5):e70306. doi:10.1002/alz.70306https://hdl.handle.net/1805/48843Introduction: Reasons for emergency department (ED) visits for persons with cognitive impairment are usually driven by unmet needs. Methods: ED patients ≥ 75 years old with screener-detected cognitive impairment (Mini-Cog ≤ 3/5) or care partner tool (Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly > 3.4), and care partners from New York and Indiana academically affiliated EDs, were randomly assigned to 6-month dementia care management or usual care. Nurses and paraprofessionals used principles of dementia care management informed by root cause analyses of participants' ED visits. We used logistic regression to compare ED revisit rates during the 6-month intervention. Results: Of 642 dyads-320 intervention, 322 usual care-256 of 632 (40.5%) had at least one ED revisit within 6 months of index visit, but without between-group differences in revisit rates, care partner activation, or symptoms of depression or anxiety at 3 or 6 months. Discussion: Using root cause analysis to inform dementia care management did not reduce ED revisits. Highlights: Cognitive screening during emergency department (ED) visits is feasible for quality improvement. ED cognitive screening alone may not identify dyads who need care management. Identifying root causes for ED visits could personalize post-visit care management. Root cause-informed care management did not reduce ED revisits. Need-based screening might better target ED patients with cognitive impairment.en-USAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 InternationalCare managementDementiaEmergency departmentRevisitsRoot causeProgram of intensive support in emergency departments for care partners of cognitively impaired patients: A randomized controlled trialArticle