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The impact of social isolation due to COVID-19 on symptom progression in people with dementia:: Findings of the SOLITUDE Study

The impact of social isolation due to COVID-19 on symptom progression in people with dementia:: Findings of the SOLITUDE Study
The impact of social isolation due to COVID-19 on symptom progression in people with dementia:: Findings of the SOLITUDE Study
Background: People with dementia (PWD) are vulnerable to abrupt changes to daily routines. The lockdown enforced on 23rd March 2020 in the UK to contain the expansion of the COVID-19 pandemic limited opportunities for PWD to access healthcare services and socialise. The SOLITUDE study explored the potential long-term effects of lockdown on PWD’s symptoms and carers’ burden.

Methods: Forty-five carers and 36 PWD completed a telephone-based assessment at recruitment (T0) and after 3 (T1) and 6 months (T2). PWD completed measures validated for telephonic evaluations of cognition and depression. Carers completed questionnaires on their burden and on 38 PWD’s health and answered a customised interview on symptom changes observed during the first months of lockdown. Longitudinal changes were investigated for all outcome variables with repeated-measures models. Additional post hoc multiple regression analyses were carried out to investigate whether several objective factors (e.g. demographics and time under social restrictions) and carer-reported symptom changes observed following lockdown before T0 were associated with all outcomes at T0.

Results: No significant changes were observed in any outcomes over the 6 months of observations. However, post hoc analyses showed that the length of social isolation before T0 was negatively correlated with episodic and semantic memory performance at T0. Carers reporting worsening of neuropsychiatric symptoms and faster disease progression in PWD also reported higher burden. Moreover, carer-reported worsening of cognitive symptoms was associated with poorer semantic memory at T0.

Conclusion: PWD’s symptoms and carers’ burden remained stable over 6 months of observation. However, the amount of time spent under social restrictions before T0 appears to have had a significant detrimental impact on cognitive performance of patients. In fact, carer-reported cognitive decline during social isolation was consistent with the finding of poorer semantic memory, a domain 54 sensitive to progression in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Therefore, the earlier stricter period of social isolation had a more detrimental impact on patients and their carers, followed by a plateau. Future interventions may be designed to maintain an optimal level of social and cognitive engagement for PWD in challenging times to prevent abrupt worsening of symptoms and associated detrimental consequences on patients’ families.
1664-0640
Manca, Riccardo
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De Marco, Matteo
7ba08c2c-0e2e-4f8e-9ae4-4ae5619d4fd3
Colston, Amanda
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Raymont, Vanessa
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Amin, Jay
692a8880-70ff-4b64-a7e9-7d0d53449a30
Davies, Rhys
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Kumar, Pramod
520fc115-9ded-4962-a93f-7f02f9bb4124
Russell, Gregor
3880cd93-7c74-4055-b347-c24ce1f49fb7
Blackburn, Daniel J.
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Venneri, Annalena
6923eab2-93a0-40ff-b91e-b8ec85a41840
Manca, Riccardo
30a5a01c-59ea-4399-80bf-16bf9613af10
De Marco, Matteo
7ba08c2c-0e2e-4f8e-9ae4-4ae5619d4fd3
Colston, Amanda
70a72275-9115-42c6-ad96-31a9e2190372
Raymont, Vanessa
86a66987-dc0e-48f1-bbe1-49b982409223
Amin, Jay
692a8880-70ff-4b64-a7e9-7d0d53449a30
Davies, Rhys
1d2b5e6e-2618-437a-b14d-af691c981ca7
Kumar, Pramod
520fc115-9ded-4962-a93f-7f02f9bb4124
Russell, Gregor
3880cd93-7c74-4055-b347-c24ce1f49fb7
Blackburn, Daniel J.
d19974cc-c773-4646-84a8-1c94e648e759
Venneri, Annalena
6923eab2-93a0-40ff-b91e-b8ec85a41840

Manca, Riccardo, De Marco, Matteo, Colston, Amanda, Raymont, Vanessa, Amin, Jay, Davies, Rhys, Kumar, Pramod, Russell, Gregor, Blackburn, Daniel J. and Venneri, Annalena (2022) The impact of social isolation due to COVID-19 on symptom progression in people with dementia:: Findings of the SOLITUDE Study. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 13. (doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2022.877595).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: People with dementia (PWD) are vulnerable to abrupt changes to daily routines. The lockdown enforced on 23rd March 2020 in the UK to contain the expansion of the COVID-19 pandemic limited opportunities for PWD to access healthcare services and socialise. The SOLITUDE study explored the potential long-term effects of lockdown on PWD’s symptoms and carers’ burden.

Methods: Forty-five carers and 36 PWD completed a telephone-based assessment at recruitment (T0) and after 3 (T1) and 6 months (T2). PWD completed measures validated for telephonic evaluations of cognition and depression. Carers completed questionnaires on their burden and on 38 PWD’s health and answered a customised interview on symptom changes observed during the first months of lockdown. Longitudinal changes were investigated for all outcome variables with repeated-measures models. Additional post hoc multiple regression analyses were carried out to investigate whether several objective factors (e.g. demographics and time under social restrictions) and carer-reported symptom changes observed following lockdown before T0 were associated with all outcomes at T0.

Results: No significant changes were observed in any outcomes over the 6 months of observations. However, post hoc analyses showed that the length of social isolation before T0 was negatively correlated with episodic and semantic memory performance at T0. Carers reporting worsening of neuropsychiatric symptoms and faster disease progression in PWD also reported higher burden. Moreover, carer-reported worsening of cognitive symptoms was associated with poorer semantic memory at T0.

Conclusion: PWD’s symptoms and carers’ burden remained stable over 6 months of observation. However, the amount of time spent under social restrictions before T0 appears to have had a significant detrimental impact on cognitive performance of patients. In fact, carer-reported cognitive decline during social isolation was consistent with the finding of poorer semantic memory, a domain 54 sensitive to progression in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Therefore, the earlier stricter period of social isolation had a more detrimental impact on patients and their carers, followed by a plateau. Future interventions may be designed to maintain an optimal level of social and cognitive engagement for PWD in challenging times to prevent abrupt worsening of symptoms and associated detrimental consequences on patients’ families.

Text
Manca et al. Frontiers in Psychiatry 2022 - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 April 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 May 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457596
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457596
ISSN: 1664-0640
PURE UUID: ba01e37e-af46-4e56-9a66-63dd63d46cf3
ORCID for Jay Amin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3792-0428

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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2022 16:53
Last modified: 24 Apr 2024 01:47

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Contributors

Author: Riccardo Manca
Author: Matteo De Marco
Author: Amanda Colston
Author: Vanessa Raymont
Author: Jay Amin ORCID iD
Author: Rhys Davies
Author: Pramod Kumar
Author: Gregor Russell
Author: Daniel J. Blackburn
Author: Annalena Venneri

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