Sabine Pickel 1 , Elmar Grässel , Katharina Luttenberger . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We investigated the effectiveness of an occupational group therapy, tailored to dementia patients, performed regularly 6 days a week, on everyday-practical capabilities and dementia-related behavior. METHODS: Fifty-six dementia patients in one nursing home in Northern Bavaria (Germany) were observed for 6 months: 28 patients in a therapy group and 28 patients in a matched controlled group. Performance tests, ADAS-kog and E-ADL-Test, were carried out blinded. Data were analyzed using adjusted mean differences for baseline and 6-months follow-up data and multiple regression analysis. RESULTS: The therapy leads to stabilization of everyday-practical capabilities (adjusted mean difference 4.0; 95 % CI 1.6-6.3; p = 0.002) and of dementia-related behavior (adjusted mean difference -6.8; 95 % CI -11.8--1.8; p = 0.009) compared to deterioration in the control group who received treatment as usual. The effect power (Cohen d) on everyday-practical capabilities is |0.83|. The therapy had no significant effect on cognitive capacity. CONCLUSIONS: An occupational therapy program directed particularly to everyday-practical activities cannot slow the progression of all dementia-related symptoms, but has a main target effect on everyday-practical capabilities. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
OBJECTIVE: We investigated the effectiveness of an occupational group therapy, tailored to dementia patients , performed regularly 6 days a week, on everyday-practical capabilities and dementia -related behavior. METHODS: Fifty-six dementia patients in one nursing home in Northern Bavaria (Germany) were observed for 6 months: 28 patients in a therapy group and 28 patients in a matched controlled group. Performance tests, ADAS -kog and E-ADL-Test, were carried out blinded. Data were analyzed using adjusted mean differences for baseline and 6-months follow-up data and multiple regression analysis. RESULTS: The therapy leads to stabilization of everyday-practical capabilities (adjusted mean difference 4.0; 95 % CI 1.6-6.3; p = 0.002) and of dementia -related behavior (adjusted mean difference -6.8; 95 % CI -11.8--1.8; p = 0.009) compared to deterioration in the control group who received treatment as usual. The effect power (Cohen d) on everyday-practical capabilities is |0.83|. The therapy had no significant effect on cognitive capacity. CONCLUSIONS: An occupational therapy program directed particularly to everyday-practical activities cannot slow the progression of all dementia -related symptoms, but has a main target effect on everyday-practical capabilities. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
Entities: Disease
Gene
Species
Mesh: See more »
Year: 2011
PMID: 21598207 DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1266137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Prax ISSN: 0303-4259