The purpose of this study is to test the adapted protocol, CAPABLE Family which builds upon the evidenced based CAPABLE program to address older adults with co-occurring physical disability and mild cognitive impairment or early stage dementia and the older adults' caregivers. It will consist of two phases - an open label pilot and waitlist control trial.
CAPABLE (NA\_00031539) is an evidence-based program that reduces physical disability, but was designed for people who are cognitively intact. The investigators seek to adapt CAPABLE to meet the needs of older adults with physical disability and mild cognitive impairment and early stage dementia. The investigators also seek to meet the needs of family members who serve as informal caregivers in relation to the physical function of those with cognitive impairment. The purpose of this pilot study is to test a new protocol for a new program, CAPABLE Family, to address older adults with co-occurring physical disability and dementia and the older adults' caregivers. CAPABLE is a multicomponent goal-directed program that reduces physical disability by working with the person and environment, but was designed for people who are cognitively intact. Based on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) request, the investigators' team briefly included people with mild dementia in the regular CAPABLE protocol. Looking back on that preliminary data, the investigators identified a subset of 12 older adults with mild dementia with Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores of 23 or below. The investigators found that more than half improved in Activities of Daily Living (ADL) and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) which is promising but much lower than CAPABLE the rest of the cohorts which suggests the need to adapt CAPABLE for people with dementia. Therefore, the investigators have adapted CAPABLE for people with mild cognitive impairment or early stage dementia calling it CAPABLE Family. As in CAPABLE (NA\_00031539), the delivery characteristics of CAPABLE Family consist of an assessment-driven, individually tailored package of interventions delivered over the course of 4 months by an occupational therapist (OT) (\~6 home visits for ≤ 1hour), a registered nurse (RN) (\~4 home visits for ≤ 1hour) and a handy worker (HW). This research study is a continuation of IRB00243117 during which the investigators conducted preliminary activities to design the CAPABLE Family intervention. This study will include two phases, an open label pilot and a randomized control trial. The investigators will collect feedback during the open label pilot from the study team clinicians, older adult participants and care partners to further refine the intervention that will be tested as part of the randomized control trial.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
74
As in CAPABLE (NA\_00031539), the delivery characteristics of CAPABLE Family consist of an assessment-driven, individually tailored package of interventions delivered over the course of 4 months by an occupational therapist (OT) (\~6 home visits for ≤ 1hour), a registered nurse (RN) (\~4 home visits for ≤ 1hour) and a handy worker (HW). Adaptations for cognitive decline will be made on a per-client basis as part of the open-label pilot. Topics of adaptations include problem areas addresses, care partner involvement, length/frequency of visits, types of assessments and questions asked, and brainstorming/action planning structure.
As in CAPABLE (NA\_00031539), the delivery characteristics of CAPABLE Family consist of an assessment-driven, individually tailored package of interventions delivered over the course of 4 months by an occupational therapist (OT) (\~6 home visits for ≤ 1hour), a registered nurse (RN) (\~4 home visits for ≤ 1hour) and a handy worker (HW). Refinements based on the open label pilot results will be included.
Johns Hopkins School of Nursing
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Change in Function as assessed by the Katz Index of Independence in Activities of Daily Living
6 questions, each 1 point for a total score of 6. A score closer to 6 indicates high patient independence.
Time frame: Baseline, 16 weeks, 32 weeks
Change in Function as assessed by Lawton & Brody's assessment of Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale
The assessment contains 8 questions with answers that are either a score of 0 or 1. A summary score ranges from 0 (low function, dependent) to 8 (high function, independent) for women and 0 through 5 for men to avoid potential gender bias.
Time frame: Baseline, 16 weeks, 32 weeks
Change in Pain as assessed by the Brief Pain Inventory (Short Form)
The Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form is a 9 item self-administered questionnaire used to evaluate the severity of a patient's pain and the impact of this pain on the patient's daily functioning. The patient is asked to rate their worst, least, average, and current pain intensity, list current treatments and their perceived effectiveness, and rate the degree that pain interferes with general activity, mood, walking ability, normal work, relations with other persons, sleep, and enjoyment of life on a 10 point scale. For the 10 point scale, 0 indicated no pain and 10 indicates the worst imaginable pain.
Time frame: Baseline, 16 weeks, 32 weeks
Change in Depression as assessed by the Patient Health Questionnaire Depression Scale (PHQ-8)
The PHQ-8 contains 8 questions, with a 0-3 scale. A score of 10 or greater is considered major depression, 20 or more is severe major depression.
Time frame: Baseline, 16 weeks, 32 weeks
Change in caregiving burden as assessed by the Perceived Change Index Scale
The Perceived Change Index Scale contains13 questions related to change in caregiver self-improvement wellbeing. Each rated on a scale of 1-5, 1 indicating much worse, 5 indicating improved a lot. The higher the overall score, the greater the improvement.
Time frame: 16 weeks, 32 weeks
Change in Perceived Change in Function Scale Score
14 questions related to perceived improvement in function. Scale of -2 (gotten much worse) to 2 (improved a lot). The higher the overall score, the greater the improvement.
Time frame: 16 weeks, 32 weeks
Satisfaction at midpoint of intervention assessed by qualitative questions
Older Adult and Care Partner Satisfaction at midpoint of intervention assessed by qualitative questions. Qualitative questions will help us understand how best to tailor the intervention for the randomized control pilot.
Time frame: 8 weeks
Satisfaction at endpoint of intervention as assessed by qualitative questions
Older Adult and Care Partner Satisfaction at endpoint of intervention assessed by qualitative questions. Qualitative questions will help us understand how best to tailor the intervention for the randomized control pilot.
Time frame: 16 weeks
Level of Cognitive Impairment for eligibility as assessed by the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) Blind/Telephone
Scoring for the Blind/Telephone assessment is out of 22. Score of 12-17 indicates Mild Cognitive Impairment/Early Stage Dementia and is the eligibility requirement for participation in the study.
Time frame: Baseline
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.