The Sharing History through Active Reminiscence and Photo-imagery (SHARP) Program engages triads (primary caregiver, person living with dementia, caregiver support person) in walking and social reminiscence, using a group tablet to access routes and historical neighborhood images serving as conversational prompts. Focus is on adapting the SHARP model to older Black dementia caregivers and on caregiver physical and mental health. Study technology measures sleep and daily step count. Weekly online surveys assess health status. Pre-post assessments measure cognitive function and mental health. Focus groups assess adaptation needs, feasibility and acceptance, and cultural significance.
The Sharing History through Active Reminiscence and Photo-imagery (SHARP) Program is a recently developed culturally celebratory, multimodal approach to physical, social, and reminiscence activity. The SHARP walking application, accessed on a group tablet, is preloaded with 72 themed, 1-mile neighborhood routes with GPS-linked "Memory Markers," historical neighborhood images and questions, to prompt conversational reminiscence about Black life, history, and culture. In this Stage I study, walking triads consist of a healthy or mildly cognitively impaired (MCI) primary dementia caregiver (aged 55+), the care partner - a person living with early-stage dementia (PLWD) or MCI (aged 55+), and a healthy or MCI caregiver support person (aged 18+). Triads walk 3x/week over 16 weeks in the gentrifying, historically Black neighborhoods of Portland, Oregon. The primary caregiver wears an actigraphy watch, uses an under-the-mattress sleep sensor, and on a weekly basis, measures weight on a study-provided digital scale and completes a health update survey. Watch, sleep sensor, and weekly measures are optional for the PLWD. We aim to (1) adapt SHARP implementation, technology, and protocol for caregivers of PLWD, and (2) test preliminary efficacy of this intervention on dementia caregivers' physical and mental health.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
21
Technology-enabled neighborhood walking 3x/week for 16 weeks with conversational reminiscence
Oregon Health & Science University
Portland, Oregon, United States
Effect on sleep health
Primary caregivers (and optionally PLWD) continuously wear an actigraphy watch for the study duration. The watch (Withings) measures heart rate variability, step-activity levels, sleep times, and sleep disturbances. Step counts (watch), total sleep time and quality (bed-mat sleep sensor), and HRV (watch and sleep sensor) will be analyzed using generalized mixed effects models with outcome being each incidence of occurrence (e.g., blue mood) or continuous outcomes (e.g., daily duration of sleep) and a time\*group interaction term.
Time frame: 16 weeks
Effect on sleep health
Primary caregivers (and optionally PLWD) use an under-the-mattress sleep sensor that measures sleep time and quality, HRV, and movement activity. Step counts (watch), total sleep time and quality (bed-mat sleep sensor), and HRV (watch and sleep sensor) will be analyzed using generalized mixed effects models with outcome being each incidence of occurrence (e.g., blue mood) or continuous outcomes (e.g., daily duration of sleep) and a time\*group interaction term.
Time frame: 16 weeks
Change in blood pressure
Pre-post difference in blood pressure are compared between primary caregivers in the experimental (SHARP intervention) and control groups (i.e., control (usual behavior) group waits 4 months then walks 4 months). Linear regression models with the primary and secondary outcome (BP and ZBI-12 (1°), at month 4 will be regressed on the baseline score of each outcome, the treatment group (experimental vs. control groups), controlling for caregiver age. The coefficient of the treatment group variable indicates the efficacy of the experiment.
Time frame: 16 weeks
Effect on mental health
The Short Form Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI-12) is administered pre-post intervention. Pre-post difference in scores are compared between primary caregivers in the experimental (SHARP intervention) and control groups (i.e., control (usual behavior) group waits 4 months then walks 4 months). Linear regression models with the primary and secondary outcome (BP and ZBI-12 (1°), at month 4 will be regressed on the baseline score of each outcome, the treatment group (experimental vs. control groups), controlling for caregiver age. The coefficient of the treatment group variable indicates the efficacy of the experiment.
Time frame: 16 weeks
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