| Literature DB >> 29951027 |
Lotte Berk1, Franca Warmenhoven1,2, Jim van Os1,3, Martin van Boxtel1.
Abstract
The world population is aging and the prevalence of dementia is increasing. By 2050, those aged 60 years and older are expected to make up a quarter of the population. With that, the number of people with dementia is increasing. Unfortunately, there is no cure for dementia. The progression of symptoms with no hope of improvement is difficult to cope with, both for patients and their caregivers. New and evidence-based strategies are needed to support the well-being of both caregiver and patient. Mindfulness training is a body-mind intervention that has shown to improve psychological well-being in a variety of mental health conditions. Mindfulness, a non-judgmental attention to one's experience in the present moment, is a skill that can be developed with a standard 8-week training. Research has shown preliminary but promising results for mindfulness-based interventions to benefit people with dementia and caregivers. The aim of this review is (a) to provide a rationale for the application of mindfulness in the context of dementia care by giving an overview of studies on mindfulness for people with dementia and/or their caregivers and (b) to provide suggestions for future projects on mindfulness in the context of dementia and to give recommendations for future research.Entities:
Keywords: MBSR; caregivers; dementia; mindfulness; older adults
Year: 2018 PMID: 29951027 PMCID: PMC6008507 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Overview of MBI studies with caregiver and patient dyads, and MBI studies with persons with SCD, MCI or dementia.
| Author (year) | Design | Sample | Care recipient relationship | Adjustments to MBSR/MBCT | Outcome Measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UCT | Older adults with SCD ( | NA | 8 weekly sessions, 2.5-h, day long retreat. | FFMQ-SF, SCS-SF, EuroQol, DASS-21, MIA, VLT, Trail Making Test Aand B | Improved verbal memory (delayed recall). Participants reported positive effects; e.g., worried less about memory complaints. | |
| UCT | Cancer patients and their partners ( | Spouse ( | No details | POMS, C-SOSI, MAAS | Significant reductions in mood disturbance, muscle tension, neurological/GI, and upper respiratory symptoms. Partner’s mood disturbance scores were positively correlated with patients’ symptoms of stress and negatively correlated with patients’ levels of mindfulness | |
| RCT | Caregivers of family members with dementia, | Parent ( | 8 weekly sessions, 1.5–2-h, day long retreat. | PSS, AAQ, POMS, SF-36, ZBI, FCI-MS, salivary cortisol. | MBSR lower levels of perceived stress and mood disturbance post-intervention compared to CON, at 3 month FU no difference between groups. No differences in diurnal cortisol response change of the course of the study | |
| RCT | Older adults with MCI, | NA | NS | Verbal free-recall memory test, geriatric depression scale, WHO quality of life. | Post-intervention, MBI less objective memory deteriorations, greater decrease in depressive symptoms, increased quality of life | |
| UCT | People with dementia ( | NS | 8 weekly sessions, 2.5 h. | WEMWBS, qualitative | Increase in WEMWBS, not maintained after 3 month FU. Interviews showed people with dementia able to learn mindfulness and experienced increased quality of life; the caregivers evaluated positively and helped with coping. | |
| UCT | Cancer patients and their family caregivers ( | Family caregivers: 53.8% lives with patient | Modified for 6-week program. Three in-person sessions and three audiotaped sessions (content validity index score of 0.944), 2-h sessions | PSS, CESDS, STAI, MSAS, MOS-SF-36, Cortisol and immune (IL-6) | Post interventions, patients improved on stress and anxiety. Both patients and caregivers lower IL-6 | |
| UCT | Two MBSR groups, | NA | 8 weekly sessions, 2.5 h. sessions and daylong session. 12-week reduced day-long retreat to 2.5 h. | List learning, digit span test, verbal fluency, color-word interference, PSWQ-A, CAMS-R, MAAS | Sign. improvement post-intervention List, delayed recall, Paragraph immediate recall, Paragraph delayed recall, Verbal Fluency Color-word interference, worry reduction (PSWQ-A), mindfulness (measured by CAMS-R, but not MAAS), | |
| RCT | Three groups: MBCT ( | Parent ( | 6-weekly 90-min group sessions | RMBPC, PSS, CESD, SF-36 Fatigue, MAAS, FFNJ, GPSE, ESS, NPI total, Caregiver appraisal, CRI, Cortisol, IL-6, TNF-α, hsCRP, Stroop interference, ANT, Word list immediate and delayed recall. | Improved caregiver self-efficacy (RMBPC) for both MBI and EDU compared to CON | |
| UCT | People with progressive cognitive decline (=17) and caregivers ( | Parent ( | 8 weekly sessions, 1.5 h. Elements of dialectical behavior therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy | QOL-AD, GDS, PSQI, BAI, Trail Making Test A and B, RBANS, | Increased quality of life, fewer depressive symptoms, better subjective sleep quality. | |
| RCT | Older adults with ( | NA | 8 weekly sessions, 2 h. | CCI, MSEQ, FFMQ | SCD participants showed decrease in cognitive complains and increase in memory self-efficacy after intervention. Attention regulation was improved in MBSR participants. | |
| UCT | Lung cancer patients ( | Partners ( | 8 weekly sessions, 2.5 h. sessions and day long retreat. | HADS, QLQ-LC, CIS-F, IES, PSWQ, MAAS, SPPIC, CRA-SE | Caregiver burden in partners decreased after MBSR. | |
| RCT | Older adults with SCD randomized to MBSR ( | NA | 8 weekly session, 1.5 h., half-day meditation retreat. | Memory (immediate, delayed paragraph and list recall), Verbal Fluency Test and Color Word Interference Test (DKEFS), PSWQ, CGI-I, PROMIS, CAMS-R, cortisol | MBSR group improved on worry, depression symptoms at post intervention and worry, depression and anxiety symptoms. MBSR participants showed decreased cortisol level for those with high baseline cortisol. | |
| RCT | Older adults with MCI ( | NA | 8 weekly sessions, 2 h, and one daylong retreat day. | ADAS-cog, RAVLT, COWAT, RS, PSS, QOL-AD, HHI, LOT-R, CES-D, MAAS | Control subjects performed better than the MBSR group on the Trails A and B tests. Non-significant trends that suggested improvement with MBSR vs. control were detected for quality of life, cognition, and well-being. | |
| RCT | Caregivers of family members with dementia randomized in MBSR [ | Parent ( | 8-week, 2.5-h, and a 5-h retreat day. | PSS, CESD, STAI, MBCBS, MOSSSS | MBSR improved overall mental health, reduced stress, decreased depression compared to CCES. Both interventions improved caregiver mental health and improved anxiety, social support and burden. |