| Literature DB >> 36078239 |
Theresa L Scott1, Ying-Ling Jao2, Kristen Tulloch1,3, Eloise Yates1, Oliver Kenward1, Nancy A Pachana1.
Abstract
Most people living with dementia in the early-to-middle stages live in the community or in their own homes and engagement in enjoyable activities is fundamental to maintaining quality of life and autonomy. Horticulture-based activities are beneficial for the health and well-being for people living with dementia ("PLWD") in residential care settings, yet evidence within community settings, where the majority live, has not been comprehensively synthesized. A mixed studies systematic review protocol was registered and a systematic search conducted to June 2022 across MEDLINE, COCHRANE, Web of Science, Embase, Psycnet, CINAHL, PsycINFO databases, using terms relating to dementia and horticulture. Original studies examining group or individual horticulture-based programs for community-dwelling PLWD were included. Forty-five articles were selected for full review, eight met inclusion criteria and were retained for data extraction. Evidence from three mixed methods, two quantitative, two qualitative, and one case study design, involving a total of 178 community dwelling PLWD, was narratively summarized. Findings revealed that involvement in horticulture-based activities led to positive impacts on engagement, social interactions, and mental and physical well-being in PLWD. No conclusive evidence was found from included studies for improvement in cognitive function. As most studies to date have concentrated on PLWD in long-term care settings, future research should evaluate the effect of these types of activities in a more rigorous intervention design in community settings.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; biophilia; community; dementia; engagement; gardening; horticulture; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078239 PMCID: PMC9517764 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191710523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Study eligibility criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Types of studies | All study designs that focus on horticulture-based activities or interventions, group, or individual gardening programs. | Editorials, commentaries, opinions pieces, and unpublished grey literature. |
| Population | People living with dementia or dyads (PLWD and their family members/care partners); | Studies that focus exclusively on care partners not included. |
| Condition | Dementia, all types included. | Delirium not included. |
| Setting | PLWD in the community. | Studies that focus on PLWD in residential care facilities, assisted living, or nursing homes not included. |
| Sources | All studies published in peer reviewed journals, empirical, interventions, case studies in the community. | Publications in languages other than English. |
Summary information of included studies.
| Study | Author(s), Year, Country | Aims | Design | Participants | Intervention or Activity and Intensity | Outcomes | Methods of Data Collection | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Hall et al., (2016) | To examine if and how to increase engagement in horticultural activities through an improved garden design and person-centered recreational programming, compared with more traditional day program activities. | Mixed methods approach. Descriptive analysis and validated observational tool. | A total of 14 participants in early-to-moderate stages of dementia, i.e., diagnosis or suspected diagnosis of dementia, MMSE 16–26, and prior interest in gardening. | A structured horticultural therapy program at adult daycare program, 2 times per week for 10 weeks. | Well-being and engagement. | ‘Dementia care mapping’ tool [ | For 77.42% of the time, participants had high well-being and engagement with the horticultural therapy. Combining structured and unstructured activities. Importance of teamwork. Garden reminiscence. Positive risk taking. |
| [ | Hendriks et al., (2016) | To develop an approach and decisional tool for personalized nature activities for PLWD. | Mixed methods. | A total of 34 participants across study 3 phases. | Individual and personalized nature activity, e.g., nature walk or a gardening activity, e.g., sowing, watering, fertilizing, harvesting, and cooking with home-grown vegetables. | Phase 1: preferred or important aspects or activities in nature or outdoor spaces for PLWD. | Phases 1 and 2: focus group. | Eight themes emerged when being in nature: pleasure; relaxation; feeling fit; enjoying the beauty of nature; feeling free; the social aspect of nature; feeling useful; memories. |
| [ | Hewitt et al., (2013) | Explore changes in well-being resulting from participation in a structured group gardening program for people with young-onset dementia. | Mixed methods qualitative and quantitative; pretest and posttest. | A total of 12 people with young-onset dementia. | Structured group gardening program, 2 h weekly for 46 sessions, across one year. | Cognitive level, activity participation, daily living activities, well-being. | MMSE [ | Results of MMSE and the Well-being Profile showed increased well-being for participants, despite cognitive functioning continuing to decline over the one-year period. |
| [ | Jarrott et al., (2002) | To compare horticultural activity program to usual activities such as games and crafts. | Quasi-experimental design. | Nine community-dwelling PLWD attending an adult day service. | Horticultural therapy program activities, three times per week across 10 weeks; sessions were 30–45 min. Activities were mostly outside, planting, tending to plants and seedlings. | Activity engagement and affect. | Observational, coding for activity and affect. Affect scale adapted from the Dementia Care Mapping tool [ | Participants significantly more engaged during the horticultural activity sessions compared with usual activities. Affect indicated ‘moderate well-being’, although not statistically different between activity conditions. |
| [ | Lassell et al., (2021) | To explore quality of life indicators after engagement in adaptive gardening compared with adaptive horse riding for PLWD. | Descriptive case study design. | Eight participants in early-to-moderate stages of dementia; 4 persons self-selected into the community-based adaptive gardening condition, aged 60–98 years (M = 82). | Weekly, one hour-long community-based gardening for eight weeks, compared with an adaptive (horse) riding program. | Quality of life indicators: participation and apparent affect (e.g., anxiety, fear pleasure, interest, gaze). | Modified Activity-in-Context-in-Time, observational tool [ | Both activities supported ‘positive’ and ‘neutral’ quality of life indicators. |
| [ | Makizako et al., (2019) | To compare the efficacy of physical exercise, horticulture activities, and control condition. | Single blind RCT | A total of 89 participants with depressive symptoms and mild-memory decline, across 3 conditions: horticulture activities, exercise, control. | Weekly, 60–90 min horticulture-based activity program for 20 weeks. Cultivating, growing, harvesting, group gardening, e.g., planting flowers in public gardens. Exercise included dual-task physical and cognitive, e.g., simple calculation tasks while performing stepping exercises. Control group, education classes involved two 90-min classes, topics, e.g., traffic safety, disaster prevention. | Primary outcome(s) measures, depressive symptoms (Geriatric Depression Scale, GDS-15) [ | Three groups compared at baseline, 6 months post-intervention, and 12 months follow-up. | GDS-15 scores showed no significant improvements across all groups. Exercise group only obtained higher immediate and delayed recall logical memory scores. Horticulture activity did not improve memory function. Horticulture and control groups showed no differences. |
| [ | Noone and Jenkins (2018) | Exploration of the subjective experience of community-based gardening focused on first person experiences (participants with dementia) and caregivers’ views. | Qualitative design, action research approach. | Six participants with diagnosis of any type of dementia (disease stage not specified) recruited from a day center and three program staff. | Community gardening sessions held once per week for six weeks. Activities included planting seeds and seedlings, making bird feeders. | Qualitative thematic analysis of participants’ experiences attending community-based gardening program and views of day center staff. | Semi-structed group interviews with participants and individual interviews with three staff following each of the gardening sessions; researcher reflections. | Gardening is an articulation of identity and selfhood and an expression of agency. It also helps develop new social bonds based on shared interests. Three themes to emerge from interviews were: (i) identity, (ii) agency, (iii) community. |
| [ | Smith-Carrier et al., (2019) | To explore emotional and sensory experiences of therapeutic gardening for persons with dementia. | Qualitative design. | Six persons with early-stage dementia attending an adult day center. | Therapeutic group gardening program, six waves across five months of spring and fall activities, e.g., planting, harvesting, pruning, clean-up, etc. | Interpretive analysis of participants’ reflections on sensory and emotional experiences in the gardening process. | Six repeated interviews with participants with dementia. | Themes derived from analysis of interviews provided support for the value of gardening for activating the senses, meaningful occupation, socialization, and mental and physical well-being. |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram [40] for selection of papers.