To determine the effect of Thai traditional music on cognitive function, psychological health and quality of sleep among Thai older individuals with dementia.
Dementia, regardless of its cause, has been recognized to be one of the most important and common problems among the elderly worldwide. The prevalence of dementia has been increasing gradually throughout the world. It is associated with medical and psychological consequences, especially in the advanced stage of the condition. Medications for dementia, specifically, acetylcholine esterase inhibitors, have proven efficacy but variable individual response. They are very expensive and stress families and insurance payers. Dementia and its neuropsychiatric co-morbidities effects not only individual patients, but also family members and care givers as it stresses interpersonal relationships, increases the need for personal care, nursing home placement, and the use of neuropsychiatric medications. Any new approach to improve cognitive function, behavior, mood and sleep quality among demented individuals therefore could have far reaching benefits for patients, care givers, financially responsive parties, and the country as a whole. There are several studies focusing on the non-pharmacologic approaches to care of the demented. The objectives were to reduce reliance on prescribed medications with these adjunctive therapies. One of the interesting non-drug trials was about music therapy. It was found that music could improve behavioral and social functions among individual demented patients. However, the methodology of each music study varied considerably. To our knowledge, there has been no music study in dementia performed in Thailand using our unique Thai traditional music. We therefore aim to study this non-pharmacologic approach in Thai demented individuals using Thai traditional music. We hypothesized that regular listening to Thai traditional music will improve cognitive function, activities of daily living, mood, behavior and sleep quality in Thai demented patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
During 4-week interventional period of each group, a researcher gives a CD to care giver and advises him/her to open the music for patient for at least 60 minutes daily, after dinner to bedtime. Meanwhile, the care giver notes the exact duration that patient actually listens to it in the calendar provided and returns the CD and document to the researcher at the end of interventional period.
Neurologic Clinic, Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine, Phramongkutklao Hospital
Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand
Division of Neurology, Phramongkutklao Hospital
Rachatevee, Bangkok, Thailand
Depression
Using Thai Geriatric Depression Scale (TGDS)
Time frame: 4-week after regularly listening to the music for 28 days
Activities of Daily Living
using AD Cooperative Study Activities of Daily Living Inventory (ADCS/ADL)
Time frame: 4-week after music
Behavior
Using Behavioral pathology in Alzheimer's Disease Rating Scale (BEHAVE AD)
Time frame: 4-week after music
Sleep quality
Using Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI)
Time frame: 4-week after music
reduction of the care giver's stress and burden
Using visual analog scale
Time frame: 4-week after intervention
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