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Momentary well-being in dementia : Observational assessment of psychosocial interventions and music therapy
Background: Dementia is an increasingly prevalent condition world-wide. A cure is yet to be found. The adverse behavioral and psychological symptoms accompanying dementia are best approached through non-pharmacological multi-component interventions. However, more than management of adverse symptoms...
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Format: | Dissertation |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Request full text |
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Summary: | Background: Dementia is an increasingly prevalent condition world-wide. A cure is yet to be found. The adverse behavioral and psychological symptoms accompanying dementia are best approached through non-pharmacological multi-component interventions. However, more than management of adverse symptoms is required to live well with dementia. Recent initiatives call for assessing interventions within the frame of positive psychology. People with dementia want interventions promoting well-being, facilitating continued relationship closeness, and supporting independency. Such outcomes guided the three research projects in this thesis.
Music therapy has so far demonstrated its potential as a beneficial approach for people living with dementia. Studies have primarily been conducted in long-term care and in populations with a severe dementia. However, most people with dementia live at home. A central aim of this thesis was to investigate music therapy for the home-dwelling population within a positive psychological framework, in particular assessing well-being and sociable interaction. Most dementias have a progressive course, which complicates a valid assessment of interventions over long time intervals. Assessment over short intervals in real-time appears advantageous to detect clinically important changes in well-being. This is possible through ecologic momentary assessment and observational methods. This thesis aimed to provide a systematic overview of available observational momentary well-being measures relevant for dementia research. No observational instruments were available for comparing well-being during music therapy and other interventions validly. Thus, the third aim of this thesis was to develop an instrument sensitive for detecting clinically significant changes in well-being over short time-lags, comparing music-therapy to other interventions.
Methods: Paper 1 is a systematic review of observational measures assessing well-being over small time-lags. The review is based on the Consensus based Standards for selection of health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN), assessing central measurement properties, feasibility, and interpretability. Paper 2 is a single-case study with a bi-phasic AB design replicated three times per participant. It included 11 participants and over 2000 observations. The study compared music therapy and regular social interaction for home-dwelling people with dementia and a close caregiver. The intervention was assessed with (1) o |
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