Effects of multisensory stimulation on a sample of institutionalized elderly people with dementia diagnosis: a controlled longitudinal trial

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- Investigación (FCS) [1286]
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Effects of multisensory stimulation on a sample of institutionalized elderly people with dementia diagnosis: a controlled longitudinal trialAuthor(s)
Date
2014-03-06Citation
Maseda A, Sánchez A, Marante MP, González-Abraldes I, Buján A, Millán-Calenti JC. Effects of multisensory stimulation on a sample of institutionalized elderly people with dementia diagnosis: a controlled longitudinal trial. Am J Alzheimers Dis Other Demen. 2014;29(5):463-473.
Abstract
[Abstract] Long-term effects of multisensory stimulation were assessed using a ‘‘Snoezelen’’ room on older residents with dementia.
Thirty patients were randomly assigned to 3 groups: multisensory stimulation environment (MSSE) group, individualized
activities (activity) group, and control group. The MSSE and activity groups participated in two 30-minute weekly individualized
intervention sessions over 16 weeks. Pre-, mid-, posttrial, and 8-week follow-up behavior, mood, cognitive, and functional impairment
in basic activities of daily living were registered. Items included in the physically nonaggressive behavior factor improved
significantly in post- versus pretrial in the MSSE group compared to the activity group, with no significant differences between
MSSE and control groups. The MSSE and activity groups demonstrated behavior improvements and higher scores on the
Cohen-Mansfield agitation inventory, verbal agitated behavior factor, and Neuropsychiatric Inventory–Nursing Home, with no
significant differences between groups. The MSSE could have long-term positive effects on such neuropsychiatric symptoms in
older people with dementia.
Keywords
Multisensory stimulation
Dementia
Elderly
Agitation
Dementia
Elderly
Agitation