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A randomised controlled trial comparing the effectiveness of tai chi alongside usual care with usual care alone on the postural balance of community-dwelling people with dementia: Protocol for the TACIT trial (TAi ChI for people with demenTia)

A randomised controlled trial comparing the effectiveness of tai chi alongside usual care with usual care alone on the postural balance of community-dwelling people with dementia: Protocol for the TACIT trial (TAi ChI for people with demenTia)
A randomised controlled trial comparing the effectiveness of tai chi alongside usual care with usual care alone on the postural balance of community-dwelling people with dementia: Protocol for the TACIT trial (TAi ChI for people with demenTia)

Background: Falls are a public health issue for the older adult population and more so for people with dementia (PWD). Compared with their cognitively intact peers, PWD are at higher risk of falls and injurious falls. This randomised controlled trial aims to test the clinical and cost effectiveness of Tai Chi to improve postural balance among community-dwelling PWD and to assess the feasibility of conducting a larger definitive trial to reduce the incidence of falls among PWD. Methods: A 3-centre parallel group randomised controlled trial with embedded process evaluation. One hundred and fifty community-dwelling dyads of a person with dementia and their informal carer will be recruited and assessed at baseline and at six-month follow-up. Dyads will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio to either usual care or usual care plus a Tai Chi intervention for 20 weeks. The Tai Chi intervention will consist of weekly classes (45 min' Tai Chi plus up to 45 min for informal discussion, with up to 10 dyads per class) and home-based exercises (20 min per day to be facilitated by the carer). Home practice of Tai Chi will be supported by the use of behaviour change techniques with the Tai Chi instructor at a home visit in week 3-4 of the intervention (action planning, coping planning, self-monitoring, and alarm clock reminder) and at the end of each class (feedback on home practice). The primary outcome is dynamic balance measured using the Timed Up and Go test, coinciding with the end of the 20-week intervention phase for participants in the Tai Chi arm. Secondary outcomes for PWD include functional balance, static balance, fear of falling, global cognitive functioning, visual-spatial cognitive functioning, quality of life, and falls. Secondary outcomes for carers include dynamic balance, static balance, quality of life, costs, and carer burden. Discussion: This trial is the first in the UK to test the effectiveness of Tai Chi to improve balance among PWD. The trial will inform a future study that will be the first in the world to use Tai Chi in a trial to prevent falls among PWD. Trial registration: NCT02864056.

Accidental falls, Behaviour change, Caregiver, Clinical trial, Dementia, Exercise, Feasibility, Postural balance, Tai chi
1471-2318
Nyman, Samuel R.
0840e7bc-aa2a-4ced-abff-e68a6b6f7a62
Hayward, Christopher
447fc738-9dcc-4f03-9731-ded730ee2eed
Ingram, Wendy
852f9de8-07c4-4b3b-b70a-60b81e162561
Thomas, Peter
67958748-7e3a-48e9-940d-b2b241686d70
Thomas, Sarah
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Vassallo, Michael
15d899f4-f6a5-42d7-8093-bd2c4565b561
Raftery, James
27c2661d-6c4f-448a-bf36-9a89ec72bd6b
Allen, Helen
4644d0e0-926d-4fd8-adf9-939bd7abb269
Barrado-Martín, Yolanda
f5b8abad-8c3e-4700-88ee-0586a7ed0a5f
Nyman, Samuel R.
0840e7bc-aa2a-4ced-abff-e68a6b6f7a62
Hayward, Christopher
447fc738-9dcc-4f03-9731-ded730ee2eed
Ingram, Wendy
852f9de8-07c4-4b3b-b70a-60b81e162561
Thomas, Peter
67958748-7e3a-48e9-940d-b2b241686d70
Thomas, Sarah
02286cb7-9195-4ba1-8778-b0d02adb3f16
Vassallo, Michael
15d899f4-f6a5-42d7-8093-bd2c4565b561
Raftery, James
27c2661d-6c4f-448a-bf36-9a89ec72bd6b
Allen, Helen
4644d0e0-926d-4fd8-adf9-939bd7abb269
Barrado-Martín, Yolanda
f5b8abad-8c3e-4700-88ee-0586a7ed0a5f

Nyman, Samuel R., Hayward, Christopher, Ingram, Wendy, Thomas, Peter, Thomas, Sarah, Vassallo, Michael, Raftery, James, Allen, Helen and Barrado-Martín, Yolanda (2018) A randomised controlled trial comparing the effectiveness of tai chi alongside usual care with usual care alone on the postural balance of community-dwelling people with dementia: Protocol for the TACIT trial (TAi ChI for people with demenTia). BMC Geriatrics, 18 (1), [263]. (doi:10.1186/s12877-018-0935-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Falls are a public health issue for the older adult population and more so for people with dementia (PWD). Compared with their cognitively intact peers, PWD are at higher risk of falls and injurious falls. This randomised controlled trial aims to test the clinical and cost effectiveness of Tai Chi to improve postural balance among community-dwelling PWD and to assess the feasibility of conducting a larger definitive trial to reduce the incidence of falls among PWD. Methods: A 3-centre parallel group randomised controlled trial with embedded process evaluation. One hundred and fifty community-dwelling dyads of a person with dementia and their informal carer will be recruited and assessed at baseline and at six-month follow-up. Dyads will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio to either usual care or usual care plus a Tai Chi intervention for 20 weeks. The Tai Chi intervention will consist of weekly classes (45 min' Tai Chi plus up to 45 min for informal discussion, with up to 10 dyads per class) and home-based exercises (20 min per day to be facilitated by the carer). Home practice of Tai Chi will be supported by the use of behaviour change techniques with the Tai Chi instructor at a home visit in week 3-4 of the intervention (action planning, coping planning, self-monitoring, and alarm clock reminder) and at the end of each class (feedback on home practice). The primary outcome is dynamic balance measured using the Timed Up and Go test, coinciding with the end of the 20-week intervention phase for participants in the Tai Chi arm. Secondary outcomes for PWD include functional balance, static balance, fear of falling, global cognitive functioning, visual-spatial cognitive functioning, quality of life, and falls. Secondary outcomes for carers include dynamic balance, static balance, quality of life, costs, and carer burden. Discussion: This trial is the first in the UK to test the effectiveness of Tai Chi to improve balance among PWD. The trial will inform a future study that will be the first in the world to use Tai Chi in a trial to prevent falls among PWD. Trial registration: NCT02864056.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 October 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 November 2018
Published date: 3 November 2018
Keywords: Accidental falls, Behaviour change, Caregiver, Clinical trial, Dementia, Exercise, Feasibility, Postural balance, Tai chi

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 426503
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426503
ISSN: 1471-2318
PURE UUID: 018e0d25-0be4-4924-b525-d0f2ce8636d6

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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2018 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 12:14

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Contributors

Author: Samuel R. Nyman
Author: Christopher Hayward
Author: Wendy Ingram
Author: Peter Thomas
Author: Sarah Thomas
Author: Michael Vassallo
Author: James Raftery
Author: Helen Allen
Author: Yolanda Barrado-Martín

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