Adjustment to Care in Dementia: An Intervention Feasibility Study v0.1

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    An Adjustment to Care Intervention for People with Dementia: A Feasibility Pilot Study in Care Homes

  • IRAS ID

    173126

  • Contact name

    Aimee Spector

  • Contact email

    a.spector@ucl.ac.uk

  • Sponsor organisation

    University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

  • Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier

    Z6364106/2015/02/31, UCL Data Protection Registration; 15/0201, R & D

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    0 years, 11 months, 20 days

  • Research summary

    Admission into a care home for people with dementia has been linked with both positive and negative psychological outcomes for both the resident and their carers. Whilst some people with dementia adjust quickly, many never adjust at all or adjustment is complex and linked to cognitive and behavioural decline (Wilson et al, 2007). Therefore, support for healthy adjustment is needed.

    Recent research (Aminzadeh et al., 2013; Sury, Burns and Brodaty, 2013, Sussman and Dupuis, 2013) has identified factors that influence different relocation outcomes and prevent adverse reactions. There are currently no interventions that support successful adjustment by emphasising the positive factors found to influence relocation outcomes while mitigating the effects of negative influences and addressing any missed pre-admission procedures, reported in the literature. The current project seeks to design an intervention that predominantly builds on the work of Sury et al (2013) and focuses on promoting healthy adjustment through an enhanced best practice based admission process.

    The intervention will be developed through systematic review of the literature and consultation with professional experts, service users, care home staff and carers. The current study will serve as a feasibility (pilot) study and test the acceptability of the intervention design, examine recruitment and dropout and establish sample size for future, larger studies. It also aims to examine whether the intervention indicates an improvement in residents’ quality of life, mood, overall adjustment and carer satisfaction with care.

    All participants will receive a subset of the same intervention, specifically tailored to their needs and with elements delivered by staff, carer or psychologist. Staff and researchers will assess the improvement indicators mentioned above using relevant psychometric measures at baseline, post intervention completion and at one-month follow up. Indirect measures (interviews and staff field notes) will also be used to indicate intervention fidelity and feasibility.

  • REC name

    London - Camden & Kings Cross Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    15/LO/0611

  • Date of REC Opinion

    21 May 2015

  • REC opinion

    Further Information Favourable Opinion