随机对照试验
干预(咨询)
心情
悲伤
痴呆
医学
临床心理学
愤怒
物理疗法
护理部
疾病
外科
病理
作者
Anthony Sisti,Roee Gutman,Vincent Mor,Laura Dionne,James L. Rudolph,Rosa Baier,Ellen McCreedy
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jagp.2023.10.016
摘要
The objective of this research was to determine if a personalized music intervention reduced the frequency of agitated behaviors as measured by structured observations of nursing home (NH) residents with dementia.The design was a parallel, cluster-randomized, controlled trial.The setting was 54 NH (27 intervention, 27 control) from four geographically-diverse, multifacility NH corporations.The participants were 976 NH residents (483 intervention, 493 control) with Alzheimer's disease or related dementias (66% with moderate to severe symptoms); average age 80.3 years (SD: 12.3) and 25.1% were Black.The intervention was individuals' preferred music delivered via a personalized music device.The measurement tool was the Agitated Behavior Mapping Instrument, which captures the frequency of 13 agitated behaviors and five mood states during 3-minute observations.The results show that no verbally agitated behaviors were reported in a higher proportion of observations among residents in NHs randomized to receive the intervention compared to similar residents in NHs randomized to usual care (marginal interaction effect (MIE): 0.061, 95% CI: 0.028-0.061). Residents in NHs randomized to receive the intervention were also more likely to be observed experiencing pleasure compared to residents in usual care NHs (MIE: 0.038; 95% CI: 0.008-0.073)). There was no significant effect of the intervention on physically agitated behaviors, anger, fear, alertness, or sadness.The conclusions are that personalized music may be effective at reducing verbally-agitated behaviors. Using structured observations to measure behaviors may avoid biases of staff-reported measures.
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