Can Agitated Behavior of Nursing Home Residents With Dementia Be Prevented With the Use of Standardized Stimuli?

Journal

Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

Year

2010

Issue

8

First Page

1459

Last Page

64

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess the relative effect of different types of stimuli on agitated behaviors of nursing home residents with dementia. DESIGN: Repeated-measures design with randomized assignment of conditions. SETTING: Seven Maryland nursing homes. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred eleven nursing home residents with a diagnosis of dementia who exhibited agitation. INTERVENTION: Different types of stimuli (music, social stimuli, simulated social stimuli, and individualized stimuli based on the person's self-identity) were presented. MEASUREMENTS: Agitation was directly observed and recorded using the Agitation Behavior Mapping Instrument. RESULTS: All stimulus categories were associated with significantly less physical agitation than baseline observations, and all except for manipulative stimuli were associated with significantly less total agitation. Live social stimuli were associated with less agitation than music, self-identity, work, simulated social, and manipulative stimulus categories. Task and reading stimulus categories were each associated with significantly less agitation than work, simulated social, and manipulative stimulus categories. Music and self-identity stimuli were associated with less agitation than simulated social and manipulative stimuli. CONCLUSION: Providing stimuli offers a proactive approach to preventing agitation in persons with dementia, with live social stimuli being the most successful.

Music and Health Institute Terms

Agitation; Alzheimer's and Related Dementias; Elderly; Long-Term Care Facility; Neurodegenerative Disorders

Indexed Terms

Elderly; Animals; Attention; Dementia; Geriatric Assessment; Interpersonal Relations; Nursing Homes; Object Attachment; Psychomotor Agitation; Self Concept

Study Type

Randomized Controlled; Trial; Quantitative Methods

Disciplines

Geriatrics

PubMed ID

20579167

Document Type

Article

Share

COinS