Pilot study of the effects of playing golf on people with dementia
Research type
Research Study
Full title
Pilot study on the effects of participating in a dementia-friendly golf programme on people with dementia and their informal caregivers
IRAS ID
224800
Contact name
David Hewson
Contact email
Sponsor organisation
University of Bedfordshire
Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier
Duration of Study in the UK
0 years, 6 months, 0 days
Research summary
The research question for this study is whether golf is a suitable physical activity for people with dementia (PWD). It follows a qualitative pilot study in Lincoln where PWD enjoyed the activity and caregivers appreciated the service. Golf combines many desirable elements in a physical activity programme that include being outdoors, social, cognitively challenging, no reaction-time component, and being a typical everyday activity. The length of time that golf sessions last could also offer a potential respite from care for caregivers.
Participants will be people with dementia and their caregivers. Eligibility criteria will include having been clinically diagnosed with dementia, being able to stand on one leg for at least six seconds to ensure participants are able to balance sufficiently well to be able to play golf. The study will be undertaken at The London Shire Golf Club, with the golf training provided by the Golf Trust, which is a charitable foundation experienced in providing golf training to people with a range of different disabilities.
The randomised controlled trial study will last 16 weeks, with a partial crossover design. The experimental group with have two eight-week periods of golf while the control group will have eight weeks without golf, then the golf intervention. There will be two 150-min sessions each week, starting with 30 minutes socialising, then 90 minutes playing golf, then 30 minutes socialising. The golf sessions will progress from putting, to chipping, and then a full swing, with sessions taking place on a nine-hole golf course. Participants will be evaluated before and after each eight-week period for physical function, physical activity level, cognitive function, and quality of life. Participants’ caregivers will also provide information related to the PWD in terms of quality of life and psychopathology in dementia, as well as their own quality of life.REC name
London - Harrow Research Ethics Committee
REC reference
18/LO/0570
Date of REC Opinion
22 Jun 2018
REC opinion
Further Information Favourable Opinion