The effects of Snoezelen (multi-sensory behavior therapy) and psychiatric care on agitation, apathy, and activities of daily living in dementia patients on a short term geriatric psychiatric inpatient unit
The effects of Snoezelen (multi-sensory behavior therapy) and psychiatric care on agitation, apathy, and activities of daily living in dementia patients on a short term geriatric psychiatric inpatient unit
A randomized, controlled, single-blinded, between group study of 24 participants with moderate to severe dementia was conducted on a geriatric psychiatric unit. All participants received pharmacological therapy, occupational therapy, structured hospital environment, and were randomized to receive multi sensory behavior therapy (MSBT) or a structured activity session. Greater independence in activities of daily living (ADLs) was observed for the group treated with MSBT and standard psychiatric inpatient care on the Katz Index of Activities of Daily Living (KI-ADL; P = 0.05) than standard psychiatric inpatient care alone. The combination treatment of MSBT and standard psychiatric care also reduced agitation and apathy greater than standard psychiatric inpatient care alone as measured with the Pittsburgh Agitation Scale and the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms in Alzheimer's Disease (P = 0.05). Multiple regression analysis predicted that within the multi-sensory group, activities of daily living (KI-ADL) increased as apathy and agitation reduced (R2 = 0.42; p = 0.03). These data suggest that utilizing MSBT with standard psychiatric inpatient care may reduce apathy and agitation and additionally improve activities of daily living in hospitalized people with moderate to severe dementia more than standard care alone.
snoezelen, multi-sensory therapy, agitation therapy, dementia, behavior therapy, activities of daily living
357-370
Staal, Jason A.
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Sacks, Amanda
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Matheis, Robert
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Collier, Lesley
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Calia, Tina
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Hanif, Henry
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Kofman, Eugene S.
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2008
Staal, Jason A.
7dd5dca2-c3eb-4731-9419-91b77d2a9d94
Sacks, Amanda
059d3d0e-8e94-42c6-a817-ec2b8c0c7e7d
Matheis, Robert
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Collier, Lesley
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Calia, Tina
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Hanif, Henry
ad2557b0-35ff-47d7-ab07-20a4ad72b89e
Kofman, Eugene S.
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Staal, Jason A., Sacks, Amanda, Matheis, Robert, Collier, Lesley, Calia, Tina, Hanif, Henry and Kofman, Eugene S.
(2008)
The effects of Snoezelen (multi-sensory behavior therapy) and psychiatric care on agitation, apathy, and activities of daily living in dementia patients on a short term geriatric psychiatric inpatient unit.
International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine, 37 (4), .
(doi:10.2190/PM.37.4.a).
Abstract
A randomized, controlled, single-blinded, between group study of 24 participants with moderate to severe dementia was conducted on a geriatric psychiatric unit. All participants received pharmacological therapy, occupational therapy, structured hospital environment, and were randomized to receive multi sensory behavior therapy (MSBT) or a structured activity session. Greater independence in activities of daily living (ADLs) was observed for the group treated with MSBT and standard psychiatric inpatient care on the Katz Index of Activities of Daily Living (KI-ADL; P = 0.05) than standard psychiatric inpatient care alone. The combination treatment of MSBT and standard psychiatric care also reduced agitation and apathy greater than standard psychiatric inpatient care alone as measured with the Pittsburgh Agitation Scale and the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms in Alzheimer's Disease (P = 0.05). Multiple regression analysis predicted that within the multi-sensory group, activities of daily living (KI-ADL) increased as apathy and agitation reduced (R2 = 0.42; p = 0.03). These data suggest that utilizing MSBT with standard psychiatric inpatient care may reduce apathy and agitation and additionally improve activities of daily living in hospitalized people with moderate to severe dementia more than standard care alone.
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Published date: 2008
Keywords:
snoezelen, multi-sensory therapy, agitation therapy, dementia, behavior therapy, activities of daily living
Organisations:
Health Profs and Rehabilitation Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 50715
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/50715
ISSN: 0091-2174
PURE UUID: 959a8496-d3ad-4b22-b27a-a3d2db899ce0
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Date deposited: 14 Mar 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:11
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Contributors
Author:
Jason A. Staal
Author:
Amanda Sacks
Author:
Robert Matheis
Author:
Lesley Collier
Author:
Tina Calia
Author:
Henry Hanif
Author:
Eugene S. Kofman
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