| Literature DB >> 32571584 |
Cindy Jones1, Fangli Liu2, Jenny Murfield3, Wendy Moyle3.
Abstract
This systematic review sought to evaluate the effectiveness of non-facilitated meaningful activities for older people with dementia in long-term care facilities. Searches were conducted in PubMed; CINAHL; EMBASE; Web of science; PsycINFO; Cochrane; ProQuest; and ClinicalTrials.gov to identify articles published between January 2004 and October 2019. A total of six studies were included. Results implied that current randomised controlled trials or controlled trials about non-facilitated meaningful activities for people with living dementia in long-term care facilitates are limited, but those included in this review were of adequate methodological quality. Meaningful non-facilitated activities, such as music, stimulated family presence, animal-like social robot PARO/plush toy and lifelike dolls, may have beneficial effects on agitation, emotional well-being, feelings of pleasure, engagement, and sleep quality. However, there remains a lack of conclusive and robust evidence to support these psychological and physiological effects of non-facilitated meaningful activities for older people with dementia living in long-term care facilities by care staff.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Long-term care; Meaningful activities; Non-facilitated; Older people
Year: 2020 PMID: 32571584 PMCID: PMC7305740 DOI: 10.1016/j.gerinurse.2020.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geriatr Nurs ISSN: 0197-4572 Impact factor: 2.361
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart diagram.
Methodology quality of included studies* (n=6)
| Study | S1 | S2 | 2.1 | 2.2 | 2.3 | 2.4 | 2.5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garland et al. (2007) | Yes | Yes | Can't Tell | Yes | Can't Tell | Can't Tell | Can't Tell |
| Janata (2012) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Can't Tell |
| Moyle et al. (2017) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Can't Tell | Yes | Yes |
| Moyle et al. (2019) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Shiltz et al. (2018) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Can't Tell | Can't Tell | Can't Tell | Yes |
| Weise et al. (2019) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Can't Tell | Yes | No | Yes |
* Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool – Version 2018 34; S1: Screening - Are there clear research questions?; S2: Screening - Do the collected data address the research questions?; 2.1: Is randomization appropriately performed?; 2.2: Are the groups comparable at baseline?; 2.3: Are there complete outcome data?; 2.4: Are outcome assessors blinded to the intervention provided?; 2.5: Did the participants adhere to the assigned intervention?
Participant characteristics of included studies (n = 6).
| Study | Country | Setting | Number of participants | Gender (F/M) | Age (years) | Cognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garland et al. (2007) | Australia | 9 Long-term care facilities | 30 | 19/11 | 79 (66-93) | Residents with dementia (MMSE): 2.5 (0-12)a |
| Janata (2012) | USA | 1 Long-term care facility | 38 | 25/13 | Music: 80.9 (9.6) | Residents with moderate-to-severe dementia (MMSE): |
| Moyle et al. (2017) | Australia | 28 Long-term care facilities | 415 | 314/101 | PARO: 84 (8.4) | Residents with dementia (RUDAS): |
| Moyle et al. (2019) | Australia | 5 Long-term care facilities | 33 | 33/0 | Lifelike dolls: 86.1(8.6) | Residents with dementia (MMSE): |
| Shiltz et al. (2018) | USA | 1 Long-term care facility | 92 | 48/44 | Music:76 (57-93) | Residents with moderate-to-severe dementia (MMSE) |
| Weise et al. (2019) | Germany | 1 Long-term care facility | 20 | 16/4 | 85.1 (5.9) | Residents with mild (10%), moderate (70%) and severe (20%) dementia |
Note: a = Mean (Range)
= Mean (Standard Deviation); RUDAS, The Rowland Universal Dementia Assessment Scale: A Multicultural Cognitive Assessment Scale; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination.
Study characteristics of included studies (n = 6).
| Study | Design | Intervention Group | Control Group | Frequency & Duration | Outcome Measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garland et al. (2007) | 3-group cross-over RCT | 15-minutes audiotape of simulated family presence 15-minutes audiotape of preferred music | Usual care 15-minutes neutral audiotape (placebo) | Once a day for three days each during weeks 1, 2, 3 & 4 Included 2 days wash-out between each treatment | Frequency of physical agitation (aggressive & non-aggressive) Frequency of verbal agitation (aggressive & non-aggressive | Simulated family presence (placebo, Simulated family presence (usual care, Responses to simulated family presence & music varied widely Placebo tape proved more effective than expected |
| Janata (2012) | 2-group parallel RCT | Customised music programs (individualised music list based on music preference, listening history & demographic characteristics) Streamed to the rooms of participants | Usual care (incidentally exposed to music programming in the course of daily living) | 4 times daily (total of several hours) for 12 weeks | BPSD (NPI) Mood state - depression (CSDD) Agitation (CMAI) | Reduction in composite scores of NPI, CMAI & CSDD in both groups Significant shift effects where NPI ( |
| Moyle et al. (2017) | 3-group cluster-RCT | PARO Plush toy (i.e. PARO with robotic features disabled) | Usual care | 15 minutes per session 3 times per week (Monday, Wednesday, & Friday) for 10 weeks | Engagement, mood states & agitation (video observations/coding) Agitation (CMAI-SF) | • Video coding PARO group was more verbally ( PARO ( PARO was more effective than usual care in improving pleasure ( PARO was more effective than usual care in improving agitation from video observation ( |
| Moyle et al. (2019) | 2-group parallel RCT | Lifelike dolls | Usual care | 30 minutes per session 3 times per week for 3 weeks | Mood states (OERS) Agitation (CMAI-SF) | No significant reduction in anxiety, agitation, or aggression between two groups Significant group-by-time interaction for the outcome of pleasure where the lifelike doll group showed a greater increase in displays of pleasure at week 3 compared to baseline than the usual care group ( |
| Shiltz et al. (2018) | 2-group parallel RCT | Music: usual care plus personalised music | Usual care | 30 minutes per session 3 times per week on 3 different non-consecutive days for 3 months | Mood states (POMS-B) Agitation (CMAI-SF) Cognition (MMSE) Medication (Scheduled & PRN via eMAR) | Agitation decreased for all participants ( No significant changes in affect, cognition & psychotropic medication exposure |
| Weise et al. (2019) | 2-group parallel RCT | Personally relevant music playlist | Waitlist control | 30 minutes every other day for 4 weeks | BPSD (CMAI) Emotional well-being, sleep quality, resistance to care & social participation (Single item questions with VAS) | Significant improvements in sleep quality ( |
Note: RCT, Randomised Controlled Trial; NPI, Neuropsychiatric Inventory; CSDD, Cornell Scale for Depression; CMAI, Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory; CMAI-SF, Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory-Short Form; PARO, Personal Assistance RobOt; OERS, Observed Emotions Rating Scale; POMS-B, Profile of Mood States-Brief; MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination; PRN, Pro Re Nata; eMAR, Electronic Medication Administration Record; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale.