In the United States, an estimated 11% of individuals over 65 years of age live with dementia, a multifaceted and progressive neurological condition that profoundly impacts memory, cognition, and decision-making. Accompanying these patients are over 11 million unpaid caregivers who lack a concise and accessible guide to navigate the complex trajectory of dementia after diagnosis. Addressing this significant gap in care, a pioneering research initiative at the Medical University of South Carolina’s College of Nursing has produced the SUPPORT-D program, an innovative early palliative care intervention explicitly tailored for people living with dementia and their caregivers.
Led by Dr. Diana Layne, Ph.D., R.N., and her mentor, Dr. Theresa Kelechi, Ph.D., the research team brings together expertise in dementia research, geriatrics, and caregiver support. Their collaborative work, funded in part by Layne’s KL2 award from the South Carolina Clinical & Translational Research Institute (SCTR), culminated in a recent publication in Palliative and Supportive Care. The study introduces SUPPORT-D, a structured virtual palliative care program designed as a comprehensive roadmap to assist patients and caregivers throughout the unfolding dementia journey.
The SUPPORT-D program is a six-week intervention modeled on a previously successful pulmonary fibrosis initiative, reengineered here to meet the unique challenges presented by dementia. It integrates a meticulously crafted educational booklet with two personalized consultations led by a nurse interventionist. Participants independently engage with program materials, then discuss their specific concerns and health circumstances with the nurse, ensuring that the intervention is both individualized and adaptable.
Central to SUPPORT-D’s design are four pillars: enhancing understanding of the disease, promoting patient self-care, emphasizing caregiver well-being, and facilitating future planning. These areas address crucial but often overlooked aspects of dementia management. By introducing palliative care strategies soon after diagnosis, SUPPORT-D aims to alleviate unnecessary burdens, improve emotional resilience, and significantly enhance quality of life for both patients and their caregivers.
Dementia comprises a spectrum of symptoms, including memory decline, confusion, and impaired executive function, with Alzheimer’s disease representing the most prevalent etiology. Its protracted clinical course often disrupts not only the patient’s life but the family dynamic and caregiver capacity. Despite this, the healthcare system frequently falls short in providing early, comprehensive support. Neurologist shortages delay diagnoses, and primary care consultations often lack the time and resources to offer extensive counseling, leaving families adrift in uncertainty.
SUPPORT-D addresses these deficiencies by embedding palliative care—which emphasizes symptom management, psychosocial support, and shared decision-making—at the earliest stages of dementia. This approach marks a paradigm shift from traditional associations of palliative care solely with end-of-life contexts. Dr. Layne emphasizes that palliative care should be viewed as a proactive layer of support that fosters well-being and autonomy throughout the illness trajectory.
The research team’s work emerges against a backdrop in which many families resort to internet sources for guidance, often exacerbating anxiety and confusion rather than alleviating it. SUPPORT-D counters this by providing evidence-based information and structured tools to elucidate disease progression, empower patients in self-care strategies, and help caregivers recognize and manage their own stress and health needs.
Dr. Layne brings firsthand perspective to the development of SUPPORT-D, having transitioned herself into a caregiver role for relatives with cognitive impairment. Her dual experience as both researcher and caregiver underscores the complexity faced by families trying to decipher and navigate dementia care. Dr. Kelechi, with decades of experience in geriatrics and caregiver support, reinforces the program’s grounding in both scientific rigor and empathetic understanding.
The initial feasibility trial of SUPPORT-D demonstrated promising results, with a 76% completion rate among participants and widespread positive feedback regarding the program’s relevance and utility. Caregivers reported frequent use of the educational booklet, often bringing it to medical appointments to facilitate dialogue with healthcare providers—a testament to the program’s practical impact in enhancing communication and decision-making.
Nonetheless, participant feedback highlighted a need for more comprehensive stress management resources. Drawing from prior findings on the anxiety-reducing effects of mindfulness, yoga, and controlled breathing techniques, Drs. Kelechi and Layne plan to incorporate these modalities into future iterations of SUPPORT-D. Their next objective is to secure funding from the National Institute on Aging to expand the program’s offerings, allowing patients and caregivers to tailor interventions according to their evolving needs.
SUPPORT-D’s success reinforces the notion that early palliative care in dementia care is both feasible and desired. By providing structure, guidance, and emotional support at diagnosis, the program empowers patients to participate actively in future-oriented decision-making, while mitigating caregiver stress before crises arise. This comprehensive model holds promise for reshaping dementia care practices and improving patient and caregiver outcomes across diverse settings.
The initiative’s broader implications extend to healthcare system reform, underlining the necessity to integrate palliative care routinely in primary care settings and to train providers in its application. Doing so could dismantle longstanding barriers to timely, compassionate dementia care and foster a healthcare culture more responsive to the complex needs of aging populations.
As dementia prevalence escalates globally, innovative interventions like SUPPORT-D represent critical investments in patient-centered care pathways. This model not only equips families with navigational tools but also positions palliative care as a fundamental component of comprehensive dementia management—highlighting the program’s potential to transform standards of care and elevate quality of life for millions.
Dr. Layne encapsulates this vision succinctly: “Making palliative care a common language in primary care can really improve quality of life. Early palliative care works, and families want it.” The continued development and dissemination of SUPPORT-D could herald a new era in dementia care, where challenges are met with knowledge, empathy, and structured support from the very onset of diagnosis.
Subject of Research: Early palliative care intervention for dementia patients and caregivers
Article Title: A program of SUPPORT-DTM: Feasibility and acceptability of an early palliative care intervention for those living with dementia and caregivers
News Publication Date: 7-Jan-2026
Web References:
DOI link to article
Image Credits: MUSC (image featuring Dr. Diana Layne and Dr. Theresa Kelechi)
Keywords: Dementia, Palliative Care, Caregiver Support, Alzheimer’s Disease, Dementia Intervention, Healthcare Innovation, Quality of Life, Patient Education, Nurse-Led Intervention, Early Diagnosis Support

