* The investigators wanted to find out if digital music and movement resources could be delivered in care homes. They rolled out a 12-week programme to 10 care homes and had 47 care home residents participate in the research. * The investigators also wanted to find out under what circumstances the digital music and movement resources would be most effective for the health and wellbeing of the care home residents. * A survey measuring the number of falls in the past three months, activities of daily living and health, psychosocial wellbeing (anxiety, depression, stress and loneliness), sleep satisfaction and frailty measures such as appetite and weight loss) was completed before and after the intervention. Also, interviews with residents and focus groups with staff were done after the intervention to find out how they felt about the programme.
The specific research objectives were to evaluate the following topics: 1. Feasibility: was the activity implemented and/or delivered as planned? Were the resources suitable for this setting? Were adherence rates at an acceptable level? 2. Context: what is the role of the care homes in providing resources to the Activity Coordinators (ACs)? In what circumstances would the programme have worked most efficiently? What were the potential barriers for care homes or ACs to provide these resources? 3. Mechanism: what underlying mechanisms made the danceSing Care programme work (or not)? Was it the situational context or the programme context? 4. Outcome: What were the results? Were the outcomes adequate and realistic for this programme? 5. Moderators: were moderating factors responsible? By moderating factors, we are referring to contextual factors that are out of the program's control but may help or hinder the achievement of the outcomes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
47
The programme was a digital movement and music programme with resources from danceSing Care and consisted of three movement sessions and one music session each week, the recommended dose agreed between danceSing Care and the Advisory group, each lasting about 20 minutes. Also, the danceSing care resources were designed to suit older adults with physical and cognitive impairments (residents with mobility aids and/or dementia). Movement sessions included chair and standing fitness, which started with a warm-up and finished with stretching exercises. Sessions were managed and supervised by care home activity coordinators.
Balhousie Care Group
Perth, United Kingdom
Participants' Programme Adherence as % Sessions Attended Out of the Possible Maximum Number of Sessions Delivered Per Care Home Aggregated as % Across All Care Homes.
The activity coordinators will fill in participants' adherence after each session. The completed files will be sent through to the investigators. Individual participants' adherence is calculated as the number of sessions they individually attended out of the possible number of sessions available to them in their care home. This is reported as the percentage of attended sessions per person per care home out of those delivered averaged per care home then aggregated across all care homes.
Time frame: Will be evaluated after completion of the 12-week intervention period
Number of Sessions Delivered, Assessed by Attendance Files
The activity coordinators will fill in participants' adherence after each session. The completed files will be sent through to the investigators.
Time frame: Will be evaluated after completion after the completion of the 12-week intervention period
Acceptability of the Intervention Assessed by Focus Groups - Semi-structured Questions Covering Subjective Views on Enjoyment, Motivation, Duration, Content Etc.
Investigators will conduct focus groups with the activity coordinators to assess acceptability of the intervention. Guide questions included: Did you enjoy using the danceSing Care online activities? Did you manage to take part in the 3+1 sessions a week? If not, why? Would you say duration of sessions was appropriate? Did you complete most of sessions or have to stop at any point? What did you like about the DSC activities? Was there anything you did not like? If you could change something about this programme to make it work effectively here, what would you change and why? Why did you take part? What made you continue to take part? What do you consider the outcomes of this program to have been for you? Would you like to carry on engaging in the DSC activities? Why/why not? Do you feel part of the DSC family/champions? Has engaging in the DSC activities brought you closer to other residents and staff?
Time frame: 1 month after completion after the completion of the 12-week intervention period
Acceptability of the Intervention Assessed by Interviews - Semi-structured Questions Covering Subjective Views on Enjoyment, Motivation, Duration, Content Etc.
Investigators will conduct focus groups/interviews with residents to assess acceptability of the intervention. Guide questions included: Did you enjoy using the danceSing Care online activities? Did you manage to take part in the 3+1 sessions a week? If not, why? Would you say duration of sessions was appropriate? Did you complete most of sessions or have to stop at any point? What did you like about the DSC activities? Was there anything you did not like? If you could change something about this programme to make it work effectively here, what would you change and why? Why did you take part? What made you continue to take part? What do you consider the outcomes of this program to have been for you? Would you like to carry on engaging in the DSC activities? Why/why not? Do you feel part of the DSC family/champions? Has engaging in the DSC activities brought you closer to other residents and staff?
Time frame: 1 month after completion after the completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Fear of Falling Between Baseline and Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using the Falls Efficacy Scale - International (Short Form)(FES-I)
It is a 16 item questionnaire, useful to the researchers and clinicians interested in fear of falling, with a score ranging from minimum 16 (no concern about falling) to maximum 64 (severe concern about falling).
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Activities of Daily Living and Health-related Quality of Life From Baseline to Within One Month of the Completion of the Intervention Using The Dartmouth COOP Charts
Change in participant's Activities of daily living and health-related quality of life from baseline to within one month of the completion of the intervention using The Dartmouth COOP which has 5-point Likert-type scaling, with descriptors and cartoon illustrations of levels 1 through 5. Rating of "1" = no impairment, "5" = most impaired.
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Activities of Daily Living and Health-related Quality of Life From Baseline to Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using EQ-5D-3L
The EQ-5D-3L descriptive system comprises the following five questions: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression. Each question has a 3-point scale for rating it: no problems, some problems, and extreme problems (1-3). The patient is asked to indicate his/her health state by ticking the box next to the most appropriate statement in each of the five dimensions. This decision results into a 1-digit number that expresses the level selected for that dimension. The digits for the five dimensions are then combined to describe the patient's health state, with a higher TOTAL score describing a worse outcome. The range for total score is 5-15.
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Psychosocial Wellbeing From Baseline to Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)
The HADS questionnaire has seven items each for depression and anxiety subscales. Scoring for each item ranges from zero to three, with three denoting highest anxiety or depression level. A total subscale score of \>8 points out of a possible 21 denotes considerable symptoms of anxiety or depression. No total score is reported. Anxiety and Depression sub-scale totals are calculated separately by summing responses to the applicable 7 items each. The range for each sub-scale is 0-21. A higher score indicates a worse outcome.
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Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Psychosocial Wellbeing From Baseline to Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS)
Individual scores on the PSS can range from 0 to 40 with higher scores indicating higher perceived stress.
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Psychosocial Wellbeing From Baseline to Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using the Brief UCLA Loneliness Scale (ULS-6)
Using a 4-point rating scale (1= never; 4 = always), participants answer 6 questions, such as "How often do you feel left out?" and "How often do you feel part of a group of friends?". The Brief UCLA Loneliness scale is summed across items to give one total score. The range for total score is 6-24. A higher score indicates worse loneliness, i.e. a worse outcome.
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Sleep Satisfaction From Baseline to Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using the National Sleep Foundation's Sleep Satisfaction Tool (SST)
9-item questionnaire (scoring 1 not satisfied to 4 very satisfied) to assesses the general population's sleep satisfaction. The SST scale is summed across items to give one total score. The range for total score is 9-36.
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period
Change in Participant's Appetite From Baseline to Within One Month of Completing the Intervention Using the Simplified Nutritional Appetite Questionnaire (SNAQ)
This is used for limited frailty testing, a self-assessment nutritional screening tool that predicts weight loss, scoring 1 (very poor) to 4 (very good) on appetite-related topics.
Time frame: Baseline and within 1 month of completion of the 12-week intervention period