This study seeks to establish the acceptability and evaluate the limited efficacy of Simple Reminiscence (SR), a home-delivered non-pharmacological intervention designed to relieve stress, improve affect, and prevent or quell disruptive or maladaptive behaviors in community-residing individuals diagnosed with early Alzheimer's disease (EAD). Unmanaged episodes of anxiety can be antecedents of maladaptive behaviors, including agitation, anger, and sometimes even violence. SR is a dyadic strategy; both the person with EAD and the caregiver engaged the patient's memory to interrupt a current episode of anxiety.
Through the intervention, family caregivers are trained to collaborate with and guide patients to access positive memories as a way to manage or move past the anxiety that plagues individuals with EAD - often arising when confronted by common complex tasks they previously were able to perform. During the project's first six months (phase 1), the investigators will develop a series of 4 video-vignettes illustrating dyads (including one member with EAD) managing a variety of anxiety provoking scenarios associated with EAD (e.g., trouble reconciling a checkbook) through the use of SR. During the second phase of the project, a research assistant will administer SR at four home visits. The SR intervention has three components: 1. A didactic component using the SR manual that the couple retains (15 minutes); 2. Viewing one of the brief video-vignettes illustrating the application of reminiscence techniques (5 minutes; a different video-vignette will be viewed at each visit; and 3. Facilitation of caregiver practice in applying the techniques, using a recent example of anxiety-linked experience of the person with EAD (10 minutes). The caregiver is encouraged to learn and practice the techniques in order to cue and coach the person with EAD in their use. The attention control treatment, a Social Visit, is a 30-minute activity in which the person with EAD, the caregiver and the research assistant (RA) review and discuss the day's newspaper headlines. The RA will use communication techniques specifically designed to keep the conversation present focused. Both members of the dyad will collect saliva to evaluate diurnal cortisol secretion.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
SR is a 30-minute psychoeducational activity administered by a trained RA at 4 home visits (week 2, week 3, week 7, and week 19). SR has a didactic component using the SR manual that the couple retains, viewing one of the brief video-vignettes illustrating the application of reminiscence techniques (a different video-vignette will be viewed at each visit), and facilitation of caregiver practice in applying the techniques, using a recent example of anxiety-linked experience of the person with EAD.
AC is a 30-minute in which the person with EAD, the caregiver and the RA review and discuss the day's newspaper headlines. The RA will use communication techniques specifically designed to keep the conversation present focused at 4 home visits (week 2, week 3, week 7, and week 19).
Emory Alzheimer's Disease Research Center
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Acceptability of SR and AC
Taped interview with the dyad will occur asking how acceptable the format, duration, and frequency of the program
Time frame: Week 20
Number of times AC was used
Taped interview with the dyad will occur asking how frequently AC was used
Time frame: Week 20
Number of times SR was used
Taped interview with the dyad will occur asking how frequently SR was used
Time frame: Week 20
Change in Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) scale
BDI-II is a 21-item, self-administered tool used to measure depressive symptoms. Scores range from 0 - 63, with higher scores indicating more severe depressive symptoms.
Time frame: Baseline, week 20
Change in State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) scale
STAI is a 20-item tool that measures current anxiety symptoms with scores that range from 20 to 80, with higher scores indicating greater levels of anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline, week 20
Change in Katz Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) scale
IADL is a six-item tool assessing the degree of independence vs. dependence in basic activities of daily living, with higher scores indicating greater levels of daily functioning.
Time frame: Baseline, week 20
Change in Well-Being Picture Scale (WBPS) scale
WBPS is a 10-item non-language based pictorial scale that measures general well-being. Individuals are asked to mark the point along each scale to indicate which image they feel most like (drawings depicting a sense of high or low well-being are arranged at opposite ends of a scale).
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Time frame: Baseline, week 20
Change in Short Psychological Well-Being Scale (SPWBS) scale
SPWBS is a 84-item self-report, Likert-type inventory that measures well-being across six dimensions: Self-Acceptance, Positive Relations With Others, Autonomy, Environmental Mastery, Purpose in Life, and Personal Growth. A higher score indicated a greater sense of well-being.
Time frame: Baseline, week 20
Change in Revised Memory and Behavior Problems Checklist (RMBPC) scale
RMBPC is a 24-item Likert-type caregiver-report measure of observable behavioral problems in dementia.
Time frame: Baseline, week 20
Caregiver's mastery of SR intervention technique
Simple Reminiscence Intervention Mastery Assessment (SRIMA) evaluation rubric to be used to determine the person with EAD's and their caregiver's mastery of the SR Intervention techniques.
Time frame: Week 20
Change in levels of cortisol
Both members of the dyad will collect saliva to evaluate diurnal cortisol secretion by standard enzyme-linked immunoabsorbant assay ( ELISA).
Time frame: Baseline, Week 20