| Literature DB >> 32595982 |
Angeliki Bogosian1, Lorna Rixon1, Catherine S Hurt1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2014 Parkinson's UK conducted a research prioritisation exercise with stakeholders highlighting important clinical research questions. The exercise highlighted the need for effective interventions to be developed and tested to tackle a range of non-motor symptoms including: sleep quality, stress and anxiety, mild cognitive impairment, dementia and urinary problems. The present work set out to build on this exercise by prioritising types of non-pharmacological interventions to be tested to treat the identified non-motor symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Intervention development; Parkinson’s disease; Public and patient involvement; Research engagement; Research prioritisation; Self-management
Year: 2020 PMID: 32595982 PMCID: PMC7315468 DOI: 10.1186/s40900-020-00212-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Involv Engagem ISSN: 2056-7529
Fig. 1Exercise Flow chart
Fig. 2Treatment Priority Ranking in the Round One Survey
Top three non-pharmacological interventions identified for each non-motor symptom in the first and second round surveys
| Non-motor symptom | Interventions (1st round survey) | Panel discussion (consensus following discussion of efficacy, acceptability and need) | Interventions (2nd round survey) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stress and anxiety | 1. Cognitive behavioural therapy (talking therapy that can help you manage your problems by changing the way you think and behave) 2. Stress management (techniques aimed at controlling a person’s levels of stress) 3. Mindfulness | 1. Acceptance and commitment therapy (acceptance and committing to valued actions) 2. Mindfulness 3. Cognitive behavioural therapy (talking therapy that can help you manage your problems by changing the way you think and behave) | 1. Physical activity (personalised physical activity) 2. Cognitive behavioural therapy (talking therapy that can help you manage your problems by changing the way you think and behave) 3. Mindfulness |
| Dementia | 1. Cognitive skills training (compensatory cognitive skills from neurorehabilitation) 2. Caregiver support (teaching caregivers skills to identify problems and support people with Parkinson’s) 3. Lifestyle management strategies | 1. Screening programme to detect /monitor cognitive changes. 2. Cognitive skills training (compensatory cognitive skills from neurorehabilitation) 3. Caregiver support (teaching caregivers skills to identify problems and support people with Parkinson’s) | 1. Lifestyle management strategies 2. Caregiver support (teaching caregivers skills to identify problems and support people with Parkinson’s) 3. Cognitive skills training (compensatory cognitive skills from neurorehabilitation) |
| Mild thinking and memory problems | 1. Cognitive skills training (compensatory cognitive skills from neurorehabilitation) 2. Stress management (techniques aimed at controlling a person’s levels of stress) 3. Physical activity (personalised physical activity treatment) | 1. Screening programme to detect /monitor cognitive changes. 2. Cognitive skills training (compensatory cognitive skills from neurorehabilitation) Caregiver support (teaching caregivers skills to identify problems and support people with Parkinson’s) | 1. Physical activity (personalised physical activity treatment) 2. Cognitive skills training (compensatory cognitive skills from neurorehabilitation) 3. Stress management (techniques aimed at controlling a person’s levels of stress) |
| Quality of sleep | 1. Sleep hygiene 2. Physical activity (personalised physical activity treatment) 3. Mindfulness | 1. Sleep hygiene 2. Technology Enabled care (to monitor sleep, but also falls and nocturia at night) | 1. Sleep hygiene 2. Physical activity (personalized physical activity treatment) 3. Mindfulness |
| Urinary problems | 1. Self-management for urinary problems (fluid management, caffeine and alcohol management, bladder retraining) 2. Lifestyle management strategies 3. Technology Enabled care | 1. Self-management for urinary problems (fluid management, caffeine and alcohol management, bladder retraining) | 1. Self-management for urinary problems (fluid management, caffeine and alcohol management, bladder retraining) 2. Lifestyle management strategies 3. Technology Enabled care |
§ = includes physiotherapy and rehabilitation §§ = exercise classes and program
Number of non-pharmacological interventions in advance of, during and after the panel discussion
| Key non-motor symptoms | Total number of interventions generated at pre-discussion survey | Number of interventions remaining following panel discussion | Additional interventions generated during discussion | Final number of interventions for ranking |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | 7 | 1 | 8 | |
| 17 | 5 | 1 | 6 | |
| 17 | 7 | 0 | 7 | |
| 17 | 5 | 2 | 7 | |
| 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
First round survey priorities by respondent type
| Key non-motor symptoms | Professionals top three interventions | People with Parkinson’s top three interventions |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Cognitive behavior therapy | 1. Cognitive behavior therapy | |
| 2. Mindfulness | 2. Stress management | |
| 3. Stress management | 3. Mindfulness | |
| 1. Cognitive skills training | 1. Cognitive skills training | |
| 2. Lifestyle management strategies | 2. Carer support | |
| 3. Carer support | 3. Compassion focused therapy | |
| 1. Cognitive skills training | 1. Cognitive skills training | |
| 2. Acceptance and commitment therapy | 2. Cognitive behavior therapy | |
| 3. Stress management | 3. Physical activity | |
| 1. Sleep hygiene | 1. Physical activity | |
| 2. Cognitive behavior therapy | 2. Sleep hygiene | |
| 3. Self-management | 3. Mindfulness | |
| 1. Self-management | 1. Self-management | |
| 2. Lifestyle management | 2. Lifestyle management | |
| 3. Carer support | 3. Carer support |