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The effect of snoezelen (Multi-Sensory Behavior Therapy- MSBT) to increase independence in activities of daily living and reduce agitation and apathy of patients with dementia on a short term geriatric psychiatric unit

The effect of snoezelen (Multi-Sensory Behavior Therapy- MSBT) to increase independence in activities of daily living and reduce agitation and apathy of patients with dementia on a short term geriatric psychiatric unit
The effect of snoezelen (Multi-Sensory Behavior Therapy- MSBT) to increase independence in activities of daily living and reduce agitation and apathy of patients with dementia on a short term geriatric psychiatric unit
Background: Prevention of ADL decline is crucial. Functional decline in ADL’s can cause personal distress, increase the potential for excess disability and increase financial cost and caregiver/staff utilization of time. MSBT was combined with standard inpatient geriatric psychiatric care.

Objective: To improve independence in ADLs, reduce agitation and apathy.

Methods: A randomized, between group design of 24 participants diagnosed with moderate to severe dementia, 12 in each group from the geriatric psychiatric unit at Beth Israel Medical Center was utilized. Participants were randomized to receive MSBT in combination with standard psychiatric care or to a structured activity such as manipulating play doo or beads, in combination with standard psychiatric care. The protocol consisted of 6 sessions, 25 to 30 minutes, and took place over the course of 2 weeks.

Conclusions: Results indicated the elders treated with MSBT combined with psychiatric care and inpatient hospitalization had greater levels of independence in ADLs than the control group, when assessed using blind nurse-rated scale global measure of independence in activities of daily living (p<0.05). In line with improved ADL functioning, elders who received MSBT combined with standard inpatient psychiatric care had significantly diminished levels of agitation and apathy (p<0.05). This combined intervention (MSBT and standard inpatient psychiatric care) may prevent a downward spiral in elder functioning by slowing or diminishing BPSD, excess disability and the negative sequelle concomitant with poor ADL self-care.
1552-5260
S61
Staal, Jason
c57925aa-8691-4cf1-a8f8-383cb2c48d0d
Sacks, Amanda
059d3d0e-8e94-42c6-a817-ec2b8c0c7e7d
Calia, Tina
4bd37cd4-7643-4763-b9a3-db4b68ff1ae2
Moore, Joshua
95695ef2-1c11-4ea6-afc8-349e86b47cc6
Pinkney, Lesley
2ea87419-cbc4-4ef3-95e0-516b510b0cab
Hanif, Henry
ad2557b0-35ff-47d7-ab07-20a4ad72b89e
Beilfus, Robert
42a7325e-14e8-4d54-a0ba-1492fc523268
Staal, Jason
c57925aa-8691-4cf1-a8f8-383cb2c48d0d
Sacks, Amanda
059d3d0e-8e94-42c6-a817-ec2b8c0c7e7d
Calia, Tina
4bd37cd4-7643-4763-b9a3-db4b68ff1ae2
Moore, Joshua
95695ef2-1c11-4ea6-afc8-349e86b47cc6
Pinkney, Lesley
2ea87419-cbc4-4ef3-95e0-516b510b0cab
Hanif, Henry
ad2557b0-35ff-47d7-ab07-20a4ad72b89e
Beilfus, Robert
42a7325e-14e8-4d54-a0ba-1492fc523268

Staal, Jason, Sacks, Amanda, Calia, Tina, Moore, Joshua, Pinkney, Lesley, Hanif, Henry and Beilfus, Robert (2005) The effect of snoezelen (Multi-Sensory Behavior Therapy- MSBT) to increase independence in activities of daily living and reduce agitation and apathy of patients with dementia on a short term geriatric psychiatric unit. Alzheimer's & Dementia, 1 (1), supplement Alzheimer's Association International Conference on Prevention of Dementia: Early Diagnosis and Intervention, S61. (doi:10.1016/j.jalz.2005.06.223).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Prevention of ADL decline is crucial. Functional decline in ADL’s can cause personal distress, increase the potential for excess disability and increase financial cost and caregiver/staff utilization of time. MSBT was combined with standard inpatient geriatric psychiatric care.

Objective: To improve independence in ADLs, reduce agitation and apathy.

Methods: A randomized, between group design of 24 participants diagnosed with moderate to severe dementia, 12 in each group from the geriatric psychiatric unit at Beth Israel Medical Center was utilized. Participants were randomized to receive MSBT in combination with standard psychiatric care or to a structured activity such as manipulating play doo or beads, in combination with standard psychiatric care. The protocol consisted of 6 sessions, 25 to 30 minutes, and took place over the course of 2 weeks.

Conclusions: Results indicated the elders treated with MSBT combined with psychiatric care and inpatient hospitalization had greater levels of independence in ADLs than the control group, when assessed using blind nurse-rated scale global measure of independence in activities of daily living (p<0.05). In line with improved ADL functioning, elders who received MSBT combined with standard inpatient psychiatric care had significantly diminished levels of agitation and apathy (p<0.05). This combined intervention (MSBT and standard inpatient psychiatric care) may prevent a downward spiral in elder functioning by slowing or diminishing BPSD, excess disability and the negative sequelle concomitant with poor ADL self-care.

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Published date: 2005
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 354610
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/354610
ISSN: 1552-5260
PURE UUID: 2f4ff35d-32be-4f13-ba1f-1918885ed6f6
ORCID for Lesley Pinkney: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3788-3420

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Date deposited: 22 Oct 2013 10:18
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:21

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Contributors

Author: Jason Staal
Author: Amanda Sacks
Author: Tina Calia
Author: Joshua Moore
Author: Lesley Pinkney ORCID iD
Author: Henry Hanif
Author: Robert Beilfus

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