| Literature DB >> 35910307 |
Federica D'Andrea1, Tom Dening2, Victoria Tischler3.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: Dementia care; Heritage items; Nonpharmacological interventions; Object handling; Psychosocial interventions
Year: 2022 PMID: 35910307 PMCID: PMC9331071 DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igac043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Innov Aging ISSN: 2399-5300
Figure 1.PRISMA flow diagram of scoping review of object handling interventions.
Object Handling Procedure of the Studies Included in the Review
| Article | Terminology | Procedure |
|---|---|---|
|
| Museum object handling | Facilitator passed around “one object at a time and encouraged touching and generating discussion through asking a range of sample prompts and questions to encourage participation and exploration before sharing information about each object. Questions were used flexibly in an open, dialogic way within the sessions based on the interaction of participants. […] Six to nine objects were used in each session.” |
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| Heritage program | The program is “designed to provide authentic, creative, site-specific, multi-sensory experience focussing on the ‘here and now’ experiences in a safe dementia-aware environment. The programme’s “Three S’s” model combines sensory stimulation, storytelling (based upon historical information) and period spaces exploration. Individual sessions are designed and delivered by creative facilitators, representing a range of artistic disciplines including sculpture, dance and music, who work to a detailed brief but are given considerable creative freedom in choosing aspects of the site’s ‘story’ to develop their ideas.” |
|
| Object handling OR museum object handling (when refer to museum) | Objects were “presented to the group, shown to all members without first informing them about the function or name of the object. The object was then handed from member to member so that each individual was given time to have a tactile experience with the object and to have a closer look. As the object was passed around, the facilitator asked a series of non-memory-related questions.” “As each member of the group shared their feelings and opinions, the facilitator encouraged participants to speak more about their responses while holding the objects. When each object made a circuit around the group, it was placed in the centre of the table for all to continue to view.” |
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| Multisensory intervention | “During the sessions, the facilitator introduced the box and passed round the items. Whilst objects were handled, the facilitator asked questions about the contents and encouraged conversation between the participants. This continued until all the items had been examined.” |
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| Museum tour | “For each tour, four to six different art works are selected around the theme and presented.” “The guide asks open questions (e.g., about the colors, aesthetic preferences), stimulates interaction between the people with dementia and their caregivers and between the participants, and gives small assignments to be executed in couples, including drawing assignments, to “adopt the same pose as a figure in the artwork” or “talk about the object in couples.” |
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| Museum-based social prescription | “Programmes of engaging, creative and socially interactive sessions, […] comprising curator talks, behind-the-scenes tours, object handling and discussion, and arts activities inspired by the exhibits.” |
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| Object handling OR museum object handling (when refer to museum) | “Object handling sessions comprise tactile, visual, and conversational exploration of authentic museum artefacts.” “Objects were presented one at a time and people had the opportunity to hold, examine, and talk about them as a group as they were passed round. Questions about impressions of the objects included sensory descriptions, preferences, and reflections; associations and anecdotes were encouraged.” |
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| Art program | “Over the course of the programme various activities occurred with varying levels of engagement. […] the participants were able engage in a variety of sensory experiences through the diverse range of activities. Visitors looked at or handled a variety of objects, in particular contexts, read exhibition materials, discussed them and took home materials to read and show others.” |
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| Museum object handling | Handling session “provided opportunities for learning and discussion about the history and use of these objects [museum objects]”. “Questions were phrased to encourage touching and exploration of the objects.” |
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| Museum object handling | “Participants were invited to choose their first museum object/photograph and suggest reasons for their choice.” The questions that “followed prompted discussion related to the physical and emotional properties of each object/photograph in turn […]. Facilitators referred to fact sheets to address specific questions.” |
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| Object presentation | “Object presentation consisted of trials to stimulate the patients auditorily, tactilely, olfactorily and visually. The patients were allowed to smell, touch and watch objects and the researcher talked about them.” |
Figure 2.The components and likely domains of object handling.
Factors That Influence Object Presenting
| Environmental attributes | Participant attributes | Stimulus attributes |
|---|---|---|
| Location | Gender | Shape |
| Number of people | Age | Size |
| Social context | Ethnicity | Weight |
| Cultural context | Level of dementia | Texture |
| Room temperature | Type of dementia | Surface characteristic |
| Room light | Person’s attitude to objects | Object history |
| Room noise | Previous experiences | Object role |
| Facilitator competencies | Person’s mood on the day | Object meaning |
| Time stimuli presentationa | Physical and sensory impairmenta | Smell |
| Seating arrangementa | — | Colora |
| Duration of sessiona | — | Densitya |
aFactors included following the consultations.