The investigators propose to adapt, improve, and implement a peer mentor support and caregiver education (PERSEVERE) program to improve LBD-specific caregiving mastery. Lewy body dementia (LBD) is the second most common dementia, comprising Parkinson's Disease (PD) dementia and Dementia with Lewy Bodies. LBD causes deterioration in multiple cognitive, motor, and neuropsychiatric domains, leading to heavy reliance on family caregivers. Patients with LBD are at a far greater risk of hospitalizations for falls, neuro-psychiatric symptoms, and infections, which are often preventable or treatable at home if recognized. Studies cite a crucial need for education and support of LBD caregivers, who face high rates of caregiver strain and adverse outcomes. Evidence from other chronic conditions supports peer mentoring as a potentially effective intervention to provide education and social support. PERSEVERE builds on our team's ongoing work of creating and testing a peer mentoring program for homebound PD patients' caregivers that has shown promising feasibility and acceptability. In the proposed project, the investigators will convene focus groups of former mentors and mentees, along with current caregivers, to provide formative information to shape the revised PERSEVERE curriculum that will include in-person mentor training and a comprehensive mentoring handbook. The curriculum will focus on key areas of LBD caregiving mastery, including: fall prevention, infections, neuropsychiatric symptoms (particularly hallucinations, delusions, anxiety, and depression), and advance directives. The investigators will enroll and train a new cohort of 36 LBD caregiver peer mentors who will be matched with 30 current LBD caregivers. Each pair will be instructed to speak on a weekly basis, using the 16-week structured curriculum as a framework. The study team will support the mentors with monthly conference calls and day-to-day availability for concerns. The investigators will assess the feasibility and fidelity of the intervention via online study diaries tracking the frequency, duration, and content of calls. During mentor training, the investigators will assess the change in mentors' caregiver mastery and LBD knowledge pre- and post-training. During the PERSEVERE intervention, the investigators will determine the change in mentees' caregiver mastery, LBD knowledge, and loneliness.
Scientific Premise. PERSEVERE is a theory-based intervention that applies Social Cognitive Theory constructs to the revised Stress Process Model to improve caregiving mastery and ultimately, outcomes. PERSEVERE targets education about common causes of hospitalization in LBD patients combined with social support from trained peer mentors to enhance caregivers' mastery and LBD knowledge. Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) proposes that behavior change is dynamic, affected by expectations, observational learning, and reciprocal influences from the environment. Study procedures. Aim 1 (Fall 2020): Revise the mentor training curriculum, conversation guides, and resource handbook. The team will convene focus groups of previously trained mentors, LBD caregivers, and LBD professionals, present each group with the original mentor curriculum (training presentation slides and handbook) and the proposed educational resources for inclusion in the revised curriculum and obtain their feedback. Framework analysis will be used to guide the revision of the mentoring curriculum, with provision of practical checklists, goal setting, and step-by-step guides for key areas of LBD caregiving mastery in addition to social support, structured as the 16-week PERSEVERE curriculum. Aim 2 (Winter 2021): Recruit and screen 36 peer mentors as PERSEVERE is being revised, followed by two 6-7 hour training sessions for mentors in early 2021. Each selected mentor will attend one training session, where the following content will be delivered: 1) study logistics, expectations, and informed consent; 2) baseline mentor data collection; 3) active listening, mentoring, goal- and boundary-setting; 4) overview of LBD, risk factors for hospitalization, impact on caregiver; and 5) practical approaches to symptom management and caregiving issues. The week-by-week PERSEVERE curriculum will be presented along with the accompanying handbook. The investigators will solicit questions and role-play conversations. The study team will encourage mentors to direct their mentees to call their respective medical teams with specific medical questions, however the study team will inform the mentors that they may contact the study team directly for non-emergent advice and resources. Mentors will complete post-training assessments and will receive a training stipend. Mentors' caregiver mastery will be assessed using Pearlin and Schooler's scale pre- and post-training. Aim 3 (Spring-Summer 2021): Recruit 30 LBD caregivers and conduct baseline assessments including demographics, relationship to LBD patient, and duration of caregiving. Mentors will be matched to caregivers by relationship to LBD patient, then by sex and age, as much as possible. Mentor-mentee pairs will be formed and the PERSEVERE handbook and contact information will be distributed. Pairs will be expected to speak for \>15-30 minutes weekly, and to review that week's PERSEVERE topics in the handbook before or during each call to facilitate meaningful conversations. Discussions are not scripted and will not necessarily be limited to that week's topics. Mentors and mentees will complete online study diaries every 2 weeks, assessing intervention fidelity. Up to 3 reminders will be sent to complete each study diary, and if missing, a team member will call the participant(s). Mentors will participate in a total of 4 recorded monthly conferences with the study team. Mentees' caregiver mastery, strain, anxiety, and depression will be assessed at baseline and after the 16-week program. Feasibility will be assessed via online surveys and study team phone call follow-up. This pilot study will determine the necessary qualities of mentors and matching, the content of the mentor training and PERSEVERE handbook, and the effect sizes of the intervention to determine the sample size for a forthcoming R01.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
87
Sixteen-week modular curriculum with printed/online workbook, additional resources, and weekly phone discussion with Lewy Body Dementia peer mentor.
Participation in a 2-3 hour focus group to review pilot and revised materials and provide feedback
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Mastery Scale
A 7-item scale measuring the extent to which a participant sees life as being under his/her personal control vs. something that is fatalistically ruled. Scores range from 7 to 28, with higher scores indicating greater levels of mastery
Time frame: Pre- and post-mentor training; pre- and post-mentoring intervention for mentees (16 weeks)
Loneliness Scale
A 3-item, validated measurement of a participant's feelings of isolation or disconnectedness. Scores can range from 3-9, with higher scores indicating greater loneliness
Time frame: pre- and post-mentoring intervention for mentees (16 weeks)
Short Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI-12)
A 12-item, validated measurement of caregiver burden in older adults. Scores range from 0-48, with higher scores indicating greater caregiver burden
Time frame: pre- and post-mentoring intervention for mentees (16 weeks)
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) - Anxiety Score
Anxiety subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, where seven items measure anxiety. Total possible subscale range 0-21, where higher scores indicate worse outcome/more anxiety. A score \>8 on the subscale indicates probable symptoms
Time frame: 16 weeks
Geriatric Depression Scale - Short Form (GDS-SF)
Brief, 15-item, highly validated scale for measuring depression in older adults, total possible range of 0-15, where a score \>5 suggests depression
Time frame: 16 weeks
Dementia Attitudes Scale (DAS)
A validated, 20-item scale measuring participants' attitudes toward dementia and individuals with dementia. Scores can range from 7-140, with higher scores indicating more positive attitudes
Time frame: pre- and post-mentoring intervention for mentees (16 weeks)
Duration of Mentoring Calls
Online structured survey of mentoring phone call duration, in minutes
Time frame: Assessed at weeks 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16; average value calculated at week 16
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale - Depression Score
Depression subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, where seven items measure depression. Total possible subscale range 0-21, where higher scores indicate worse outcome/more depression. A score \>8 on the subscale indicates probable symptoms
Time frame: 16 weeks
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