Toward the Integration of Technology-Based Interventions in the Care Pathway for People with Dementia: A Cross-National Study

Background: The integration of technology-based interventions into health and care provision in our aging society is still a challenge especially in the care pathway for people with dementia. Objective: The study aims to: (1) identify which socio-demographic characteristics are independently associa...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2021-10, Vol.18 (19), p.10405
Hauptverfasser: Stara, Vera, Vera, Benjamin, Bolliger, Daniel, Paolini, Susy, de Jong, Michiel, Felici, Elisa, Koenderink, Stephanie, Rossi, Lorena, Von Doellen, Viviane, di Rosa, Mirko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background: The integration of technology-based interventions into health and care provision in our aging society is still a challenge especially in the care pathway for people with dementia. Objective: The study aims to: (1) identify which socio-demographic characteristics are independently associated with the use of the embodied conversational agent among subjects with dementia, (2) uncover patient cluster profiles based on these characteristics, and (3) discuss technology-based interventions challenges. Methods: A virtual agent was used for four weeks by 55 persons with dementia living in their home environment. Results: Participants evaluated the agent as easy-to-use and quickly learnable. They felt confident while using the system and expressed the willingness to use it frequently. Moreover, 21/55 of the patients perceived the virtual agent as a friend and assistant who they could feel close to and who would remind them of important things. Conclusions: Technology-based interventions require a significant effort, such as personalized features and patient-centered care pathways, to be effective. Therefore, this study enriches the open discussion on how such virtual agents must be evidence-based related and designed by multidisciplinary teams, following patient-centered care as well as user-centered design approaches.
ISSN:1660-4601
1661-7827
1660-4601
DOI:10.3390/ijerph181910405