Immediate Benefit of Art on Pain and Well-being in Community-dwelling Patients with Mild Alzheimer's

Journal

American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and other Dementias

Year

2020

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The present report aims to evaluate whether singing intervention can bring an immediate benefit that is greater than the one provided by painting intervention on pain and well-being. METHODS: Fifty-nine mild patients with Alzheimer disease were randomized to a 12-week singing (n = 31) or painting group (n = 28). In the present analysis, the immediate evolution of pain and well-being was compared across sessions between the 2 groups using mixed-effects models. RESULTS: We observed a significant improvement in well-being for both singing and painting groups immediately after sessions, compared to the assessment before the sessions. We did not observe this improvement across the sessions for pain intensity measurement. DISCUSSION: Our results revealed that both painting and singing interventions provide an immediate benefit on the patients' well-being.

Music and Health Institute Terms

Alzheimers and Related Dementias; Elderly; Mental Health; Music Medicine; Neurodegenerative Disorders; Pain; Pain Management and Control; Pain Score or Rating; Pain Severity; Quality of Life; Recreative Music Methods; Self-Report Measures; Singing a Song; Wellness and Well-Being

Indexed Terms

Elderly; Elderly; Alzheimer Disease; Art; Independent Living; Pain; Quality of Life; Alzheimer disease; pain; quality of life; well-being

Study Type

Quantitative Methods; Randomized Controlled Trial

PubMed ID

31288544

Document Type

Article

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