| Literature DB >> 28912959 |
Iracema Leroi1, Annie Pye1, Christopher J Armitage2, Anna Pavlina Charalambous3, Fofi Constantinidou4, Catherine Helmer5, Ines Himmelsbach6, Sarah Marié7, Jahanara Miah1, Suzanne Parsons8, Jemma Regan1, Chryssoula Thodi3, Lucas Wolski6, Abebaw Mengistu Yohannes9, Piers Dawes2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hearing and vision impairments are among the most common and disabling comorbidities in people living with dementia. Intervening to improve sensory function could be a means by which the lives of people living with dementia may be improved. However, very few studies have tried to ameliorate outcomes in dementia by improving sensory function. This paper describes the multi-step development of a new intervention designed to support hearing and vision function in people living with dementia in their own homes. At the end of the development programme, it is anticipated that a 'sensory support' package will be ready for testing in a full scale randomised controlled trial.Entities:
Keywords: Complex intervention; Dementia; Hearing impairment; Intervention mapping; Vision impairment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28912959 PMCID: PMC5594580 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-017-0176-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Description of ‘dimensions of complexity’ in the proposed intervention study as per Medical Research Council Guidance [1]
| Dimension | Reason for complexity |
|---|---|
| Number of and interactions between components within the experimental interventions | Since we anticipate that no two individuals will have the same impairments, the assessment and management of impairment versus functional need will be undertaken by different individuals due to differing skill sets. For example, vision and hearing impairment requiring devices (glasses and hearing aids) will be undertaken by specialist clinicians (optometrists, ophthalmologists and audiologists), whereas the functional ability and environmental context, caregiver assessment and the resulting management strategy will be undertaken by a sensory support worker |
| Number and difficulty of behaviours required by those delivering or receiving the intervention | Whereas the clinicians will assess and correct hearing and vision impairments according to their standard good practice guidelines, the sensory support worker will undertake newly learned protocols, and will have to choose from a variety of elements, likely within different modules including: vision training, auditory training, caregiver education and training, information delivery, sign-posting and environmental assessment and correction |
| Number and variability of outcomes | In order to fulfil the remit of improving ‘mental well-being’ in elderly EU citizens, various outcomes need to be captured, including health-related quality of life (QoL), improved functional ability, social connectivity, caregiver factors, attainment of personal goals, as well as more easily quantifiable factors such as cognitive performance, level of depression and other behavioural disturbances. |
| Degree of flexibility or tailoring of the intervention permitted Implications for development and evaluation | Since no two individuals will have the same degree of cognitive and sensory impairment and functional ability, the intervention will have to be highly tailored and individualised, albeit within the structure of a reproducible, manualised and modular approach in which each person with dementia: caregiver dyad will be offered each module of the intervention package |
| A good theoretical understanding is needed of how the intervention causes change, so that weak links in the causal chain can be identified and strengthened | The background literature of existing evidence of potential mechanisms, as well as clinical experience, has suggested that each aspect of the intervention can be linked to identifiable intermediate impacts and final outcomes, and can be outlined in a logic model [ |
Fig. 1Flowchart of the sequential and simultaneous steps in the research programme. Person with dementia is abbreviated as PwD
Sub-studies included in the process of developing a complex intervention
| Sub-study | Aim | Participants | Design | Setting | Data analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expert Reference Group | To scope expert opinions on gaps in understanding of the support care needs and potential solutions for people with cognitive and sensory problems | Expert professionals from several disciplines (audiology, vision science, ophthalmology, optometry, health psychology, social work, occupational psychology, occupational therapy and social gerontology) | Three components: | A two-day meeting in Athens, Greece | Prototypical case discussions will be transcribed and subject to content analysis |
| Focus group A | To scope the needs of people with dementia and sensory impairment | Three focus groups ( | Focus groups will be used to discuss support care needs of this population | Three focus groups will take place in each of three sites (total of nine groups): Manchester, Nicosia and Bordeaux | Conversations will be transcribed using MAXQDA software and subjected to content analysis. Cross-site differences will be explored within the analysis of these discussions |
| Needs analysis survey | To scope the support care needs of people with dementia and sensory impairment | People with dementia and sensory impairment and their study partner. Three sites will recruit between 30 and 40 dyads each | A series of questionnaires will be used to scope the needs, quality of life, degree of impairment, caregiver burden, mental and physical health of participants | Manchester will be the site for 40 participant dyads; Nicosia and Bordeaux will each recruit 30 dyads (total of 100 dyads). | Regression analyses will be used to explore the relationships between variables |
| Focus group B | To receive feedback on a draft intervention | Three focus groups ( | Information from the preceding stages will be integrated to inform a draft intervention, which which will be presented to participants for comment and feedback | These will be the same three sites that participated in focus group A; however, the participants may differ between the two focus groups | As with focus group A, discussions will be transcribed and analysed using content analysis |
| Field Trial of draft intervention | To trial a ‘sensory support’ intervention for people with dementia and sensory impairment | Eight participant dyads (people with dementia and sensory impairment and their study partners) in each of three sites | A 12-week ‘sensory support’ intervention involving correction of hearing/vision impairments, communication training, ‘sensory proofing’ the home environment, and signposting to relevant services. Baseline and follow-up data will be collected along with process measures and reflective diaries | Three sites will recruit a total of 24 participant dyads: Manchester, Nicosia, and Bordeaux | Data from the diaries and verbatim data from the interviews will be analysed using a summative content analysis. |
Questionnaires to be administered to affected participants, significant others and for consensus response in the survey component of the prototype intervention development
| Affected participant | Significant other |
|---|---|
| Socio-demographic information | Socio-demographic information |
| Hearing Handicap Inventory for Elderly Screening (HHIE-S) [ | Geriatric Depression Scale short form (GDS-s) [ |
| Veterans Affairs Low Vision Visual Functioning Questionnaire (LV VFQ-20) [ | Short version of the Burden Scale for Family Caregivers (BSFC-S) [ |
| Six-item De Jong Gierveld Loneliness Scale [ | Six-item De Jong Gierveld Loneliness Scale [ |
| Geriatric Depression Scale short form (GDS-s) [ | Short version of the Information Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQ CODE) [ |
| DEMQOL-health related quality of life in people with dementia [ | |
| Six-item Cognitive Impairment Test (6CIT) [ | Patient Health Questionnaire-15 [ |
| Final scale from the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) [ | |
| Supportive Care Needs Survey (adapted for this population with permission from the authors) [ | |
Fig. 2Flowchart of the components of the field test
Types of feedback required from ‘Patient and Public Voice’ in the development of the intervention
| Type of feedback required | Method to obtain this |
|---|---|
| Study design and procedures | Consultation using structured interviews |
| Participant information sheets | Consultation using structured questionnaires |
| Intervention components | Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA) cycles [ |
| Intervention implementation | PDSA cycles |