Abstract
Background
Current projections indicate that there will be a significant increase in the number
of people with dementia in Ireland, from approximately 40,000 at present to 100,000
by 2036. Psychosocial interventions, such as reminiscence, have the potential to improve
the quality of life of people with dementia. However, while reminiscence is used widely
in dementia care, its impact on the quality of life of people with dementia remains
largely undocumented and there is a need for a robust and fair assessment of its overall
effectiveness. The DementiA education programme incorporating REminiscence for Staff study will evaluate the effectiveness of a structured reminiscence-based education
programme for care staff on the quality of life of residents with dementia in long-stay
units.
Methods Design
The study is a two-group, single-blind cluster randomised trial conducted in public
and private long-stay residential settings in Ireland. Randomisation to control and
intervention is at the level of the long-stay residential unit. Sample size calculations
suggest that 18 residential units each containing 17 people with dementia are required
for randomisation to control and intervention groups to achieve power of at least
80% with alpha levels of 0.05. Each resident in the intervention group is linked with
a nurse and care assistant who have taken the structured reminiscence-based education
programme. Participants in the control group will receive usual care. The primary
outcome is quality of life of residents as measured by the Quality of Life-AD instrument.
Secondary outcomes include agitation, depression and carer burden. Blinded outcome
assessment is undertaken at baseline and at 18-22 weeks post-randomisation.
Discussion
Trials on reminiscence-based interventions for people with dementia have been scarce
and the quality of the information arising from those that have been done has been
undermined by methodological problems, particularly in relation to scale and scope.
This trial is powered to deliver more credible and durable results. The trial may
also convey process utility to a long-stay system in Ireland that has not been geared
for education and training, especially in relation to dementia. The results of this
trial are applicable to long-stay residential units in Ireland and internationally.
Trial registration
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN99651465
| Original language | English (Ireland) |
|---|---|
| Journal | Trials |
| Volume | 12 |
| Issue number | 41 |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2011 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- O'Shea, E.,Devane, D.,Murphy, K.,Cooney, A.,Casey, D.,Jordan, F.,Hunter, A., Murphy, E.