| Literature DB >> 32608300 |
Jaime Perales-Puchalt1, Kelli Barton2, Lauren Ptomey3, Michelle Niedens1, Amy Yeager1, Laura Gilman4, Pam Seymour5, Amanda George6, Susan Sprague7, Antonio Mirás Neira8, Rik Van Dyke9, Linda Teri10, Eric D Vidoni1.
Abstract
Replications of evidence-based dementia care receiver-caregiver dyad interventions in the community are scarce. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of the Kansas City implementation of Reducing Disability in Alzheimer's Disease (RDAD) among a convenience sample of dyads with moderate dementia, which addressed needs identified by nine participating community agencies. We hypothesized that dyads' mental health and physical activity outcomes would improve from baseline to end-of-treatment. The final analytic sample included 66 dyads. Outcomes improved (p < .01) from pre- to post-intervention: behavioral symptom severity (range 0-36) decreased from 11.3 to 8.6, physical activity increased from 125.0 to 190.0 min/week, caregiver unmet needs (range 0-34) decreased from 10.6 to 5.6, caregiver behavioral symptom distress (0-60) decreased from 15.5 to 10.4, and caregiver strain (0-26) decreased from 11.1 to 9.7. This adapted implementation of RDAD leads to clinically meaningful improvements and might inform scaling-up.Entities:
Keywords: caregiving; dementia; dyads; effectiveness; implementation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32608300 PMCID: PMC7775330 DOI: 10.1177/0733464820934683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Gerontol ISSN: 0733-4648