Evaluating a brief intervention for mealtime difficulty on older adults with dementia

Aims and objective To test a spaced retrieval intervention using spaced retrieval to alleviate mealtime difficulties in older people with dementia. Design A single‐case study design. Setting Nursing Homes in North Central England, United Kingdom. Participants Older people with Alzheimer’s disease. M...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nursing Open 2023-01, Vol.10 (1), p.182-194
Hauptverfasser: Rehman, Salma, Likupe, Gloria, McFarland, Agi, Watson, Roger
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aims and objective To test a spaced retrieval intervention using spaced retrieval to alleviate mealtime difficulties in older people with dementia. Design A single‐case study design. Setting Nursing Homes in North Central England, United Kingdom. Participants Older people with Alzheimer’s disease. Methods A single‐case study using an ABA design was used. Data were collected using the Edinburgh Feeding Evaluation in Dementia scale, Mini Nutritional Assessment, and Body Mass Index before intervention, postintervention and following 3 months of postintervention. Realist evaluation was used to identify for which participants the intervention was effective, and an economic evaluation was also carried out. Finding Of 15 participants who entered the study, eight completed all phases of the study. A mean 104.4 h were needed to deliver the intervention. The number of sessions required ranged from 90–222. The length of time each participant retained information (for all sessions) ranged from 13–28 min. Participants had most difficulty with: “putting food into mouth and chewing it”; “realizing it was mealtime”; and “eating a whole meal continuously.” A reduction in the difficulty with mealtimes occurred between phase A1–A2 for most participants. Six participants maintained this in phase A3. Similar patterns were evident for nutritional scores. For most participants, the effect size of the intervention was moderate or large. Conclusions Spaced retrieval is useful in reducing mealtime difficulties in older participants with dementia. While the results of this study are promising, further large and multicentre trials are needed to explore the effectiveness of the intervention in diverse populations.
ISSN:2054-1058
2054-1058
DOI:10.1002/nop2.1293