| Literature DB >> 33233605 |
Dympna Casey1, Eva Barrett2, Tanja Kovacic3, Daniele Sancarlo4, Francesco Ricciardi4, Kathy Murphy1, Adamantios Koumpis5, Adam Santorelli6, Niamh Gallagher1, Sally Whelan1.
Abstract
People with dementia often experience loneliness and social isolation. This can result in increased cognitive decline which, in turn, has a negative impact on quality of life. This paper explores the use of the social robot, MARIO, with older people living with dementia as a way of addressing these issues. A descriptive qualitative study was conducted to explore the perceptions and experiences of the use and impact of MARIO. The research took place in the UK, Italy and Ireland. Semi-structured interviews were held in each location with people with dementia (n = 38), relatives/carers (n = 28), formal carers (n = 28) and managers (n = 13). The data was analyzed using qualitative content analysis. The findings revealed that despite challenges in relation to voice recognition and the practicalities of conducting research involving robots in real-life settings, most participants were positive about MARIO. Through the robot's user-led design and personalized applications, MARIO provided a point of interest, social activities, and cognitive engagement increased. However, some formal carers and managers voiced concern that robots might replace care staff.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s; MARIO; companion robots; dementia; long-term care; older adults; qualitative research; quality of care; social robots
Year: 2020 PMID: 33233605 PMCID: PMC7699754 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17228621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1A resident of the nursing home in Ireland interacting with the MARIO social robot as part of her daily routine. (The first author has copyright of this figure).
Participants numbers. Interactions with MARIO.
| Hospital (Italy) | Long-Term Care (Ireland) | Community (UK) | Across Sites | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant Categories | ||||
| People with dementia | 20 | 10 | 8 | 38 |
| Relatives/Carers | 18 | 6 | 4 | 28 |
| Formal Carers | 20 | 8 | 0 | 28 |
| Managers | 2 | 5 | 6 | 13 |
| Total Participants across categories | 60 | 29 | 18 | 107 |
|
| Hospital | Long-Term Care | Community | Across Sites |
| Number of interactions with MARIO. | 75 | 96 1 | 24 | 195 |
|
| Hospital | Long-Term Care | Community | Across sites |
| Average with MARIO per session. | 43.7 | 35 | 60 | 41.3 |
| TOTAL INTERACTIONS | Values | |||
| Total duration of interactions with MARIO (minutes)— Mean ± SD Range | 198.62 ± 101.09 15—524 | |||
| Number of Interactions between people with dementia and MARIO— Mean ± SD Range | 5.13 ± 3.44 1—12 | |||
1 In the residential care setting 3 participants completed one, seven, and four MARIO engagements respectively, whereas all the other 7 residents completed twelve engagements.
Pilot site stakeholder codes.
| Stakeholders | Ireland: Residential Care Setting | UK: Community Setting | Italy: Hospital Setting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Person with Dementia | GD | SD | ID |
| Relative | GR | SRC * | IR |
| Carer | GC | IC | |
| Manager | GM | SM | IM |
* Indicates that some relatives fulfilled the role of carer in the community setting.
Summary of Discussion.
| Discussion Themes | Literature | MARIO |
|---|---|---|
| Acceptability | There are divided views within the literature as to the acceptability of social robots in the care of people with dementia, with some researchers reporting that they are not acceptable and others that they are. | Robots were found to be acceptable to people with dementia. In addition the embodied presence of the robot and personalisation of the applications to the user was correlated with increased engagement. |
| Human-Robot Relationships | The nature and desirability of human-robot relationships is an area of divided opinion. | MARIO found evidence that the robot human relationship strengthened over time, many people with dementia referred to MARIO as ‘he’ or ‘she’ or as ‘my friend’. |
| Social Activities and Social Isolation | Many studies conducted in long-term care and hospital care settings have found that participants’ lives were dominated by routine with long periods of inactivity, an absence of social participation, low levels of communication and high levels of loneliness. | MARIO provided a conduit for connection to family and friends and provided information on personal interests, giving the person with dementia the potential to engage more in conversations. |
| Enhancing Autonomy | Many researchers have identified autonomy as a core attribute of the quality of care of older people | The MARIO findings support this claim as it was the autonomy given to people with dementia to make autonomous choices about what activities they wanted to do that was particularly valued. |