Sustaining Our Relationship: Dyadic Interactions Supported by Technology for People with Dementia and Their Informal Caregivers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. The I-CARE System
2.3. Participants and Procedure
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative: Descriptive Characteristics of the Participants
3.2. Qualitative: I-CARE Usability
3.2.1. Usefulness
3.2.2. User-Friendliness
3.3. Quantitative: Primary Outcome Measures
3.4. Qualitative: Identified Themes
3.4.1. The Beneficial Effects on the Dyadic Relationship
3.4.2. Technology Requirements
4. Discussion
4.1. Usability Issues
4.2. Quantitative Outcomes
4.3. Qualitatively Exploring the Impacts of I-CARE
4.4. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Outcome | Tool | Description |
---|---|---|
Person living with dementia | ||
Dementia severity | Functional Assessment Staging Tool (FAST) [37] |
|
Quality of Life | Dementia Quality of Life (DEMQOL/DEMQOL-Proxy) [39] |
|
Informal caregiver | ||
Quality of Life | Carer Quality of Life (Carer-Qol-7D) [42] |
|
Caregiver Burden | Burden Scale for Family Caregiving (BSFC) [45] |
|
Dyad | ||
Relationship Quality | Quality of Caregiver-Patient Relationship (QCPR) [47] |
|
PERSON LIVING WITH DEMENTIA | CAREGIVER | DYADIC RELATIONSHIP | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ID | Gender: Age | FAST a | Education | ID | Gender: Age | Caregiving Hours b | Education | Type | Cohabiting | Children | Services d |
P1 | M: 58 | Severe | Secondary | C1 | F: 57 | 11–13 h | Secondary | Spousal | ✓ | ✓ | None |
P2 | M: 80 | Mild | Tertiary | C2 | F: 70 | 2–3 h | Secondary | Spousal | ✓ | ✓ | Day Centre |
P3 | M: 85 | Moderate–severe | Secondary | C3 | F: 83 | >14 h | Secondary | Spousal | ✓ | Home assistant | |
P4 | F: 82 | Severe | Secondary | C4 | M: 86 | 9–10 h | Secondary | Spousal | ✓ | ✓ | Day Centre |
P5 | M: 69 | Mild–moderate | Tertiary | C5 | F: 58 | 2–3 h | Tertiary | Spousal | ✓ | ✓✓ c | None |
P6 | M: 89 | Severe | Secondary | C6 | F: 87 | >14 h | Secondary | Spousal | ✓ | ✓ | Assisted living |
P7 | M: 83 | Severe | Tertiary | C7 | F: 76 | 4–6 h | Primary | Spousal | ✓ | Assisted living | |
P8 | F: 77 | Severe | Secondary | C8 | F: 75 | >14 h | Secondary | Siblings | ✓ | None | |
P9 | M: 73 | Mild | Secondary | C9 | F: 59 | 2–3 h | Tertiary | Spousal | ✓ | ✓✓ | Home Assistant |
POST-INTERVENTION | FOLLOW-UP | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Observed Cases (OC) | Observed Cases (OC) | Last Observation Carried Forward (LOCF) | |||||||
AD | Paired t-Test (p-Value) | 95 % CI | AD | Paired t-Test (p-Value) | 95 % CI | AD | Paired t-Test (p-Value) | 95 % CI | |
Person living with dementia (PLWD) | |||||||||
DEMQOL/ DEMQOL-Proxy | –0.67 | –0.206 (0.842) | [–8.11, 6.78] | –9.57 | –3.126 (0.020) * | [–17.06, –2.08] | –7.40 | –2.728 (0.026) * | [–13.73, –1.15] |
QCPR Total | 4.75 | 1.129 (0.296) | [–5.20, 14.70] | –3.5 | –5.218 (0.003) * | [–5.22, –1.78] | –2.63 | –3.479 (0.010) * | [–4.41, –0.84] |
QCPR Warmth | 3.25 | 2.542 (0.038) * | [0.23, 6.27] | –1.33 | –1.754 (0.140) | [–3.29, 0.62] | –1.00 | –1.673 (0.138) | [–2.41, 0.41] |
QCPR Criticism | –2.13 | –0.653 (0.534) | [–9.82, 5.57] | 2.17 | 2.291 (0.071) | [–0.26, 4.60] | 1.63 | 2.089 (0.075) | [–0.21, 3.46] |
Caregiver | |||||||||
CarerQol-7D | –3.83 | –0.744 (0.478) | [–15.72, 8.05] | –2.60 | –0.973 (0.368) | [–9.14, 3.94] | –2.02 | –0.974 (0.359) | [–6.81, 2.77] |
QCPR Total | 1.11 | 0.254 (0.806) | [–8.97, 11.19] | –3.00 | –3.240 (0.018) * | [–5.27, –0.73] | –2.33 | –2.800 (0.023) * | [–4.25, –0.41] |
QCPR Warmth | 0.22 | 0.102 (0.921) | [–4.79, 5.23] | –2.00 | –2.449 (0.049) * | [–3.99, –0.00] | –1.56 | –2.256 (0.054) | [–3.15, 0.03] |
QCPR Criticism | –0.89 | –0.392 (0.706) | [–6.12, 4.34] | 1.00 | 1.620 (0.156) | [–0.51, 2.51] | 0.78 | 1.575 (0.154) | [–0.36, 1.91] |
BSFC | –3.67 | –1.103 (0.302) | [–11.33, 4.00] | 1.29 | 0.881 (0.412) | [–2.28, 4.86] | 1.00 | 0.885 (0.402) | [–1.61, 3.61] |
Themes | Subthemes | Example Quotes |
---|---|---|
The beneficial effects on the dyadic relationship | Enrichment in social interactions | “Yes, it was rewarding. Worth it or not. In what way should it be worth? It was interesting to see, what my husband is interested in and what can we accomplish together. We enjoyed it, that also is a goal.” (C2) |
Facilitating communication | “When we were doing this, we eventually sat there for more than half an hour and watched, and [my husband] started to talk about different topics, that were connected to the pictures in some way. These topics were old memories of friends and so on. I thought that was good, very, very good. That was worth it. Just for that, it was worth it.” (C5) “No, he simply watched that and he thought it was very nice […] for example the cat, what they are up to. I could see he was interested. But talking about it…he had forgotten it a moment later. That’s how it is. What happened five minutes ago, is instantly gone again. So, we can’t talk together. We just [hesitates] are together, when I visit.” (C6) | |
Providing a shared activity | “It was fun, and gave us something new to talk about and explore together.” (C3) “Like we used it now, yes absolutely. It was a nice new routine to have together, instead of just watching TV silently. We could just whip up the tablet instead when we wanted.” (C8) | |
Togetherness in the relationship | “There are hours where she sits in her chair and simply looks out of the window, without saying anything or even standing up, for hours! So, when we are using this device and try to figure it out it’s much more interesting to be together. This half an hour or 15 min or longer, where we are fiddling around with the device, is much more useful, for me as well because it is this “togetherness” that we create.” (C4) | |
Technology requirements | Barriers to overcome | “Both need to be a bit interested in technology, or at least one of them have to know how to fix it if something is wrong, or to know where to get help.” (C1) “[…] how we were together, that was fun! I was surprised that it worked so well to get her interested. Every time we managed to use the thing, it was an adventure [laughs]. That was also a positive surprise when we managed to take the [I-CARE profile] picture. We are delighted every time when we see the picture of ourselves [on the tablet].” (C4) |
Facilitators to promote | “Well, that there’s good instructions and continuous support. If you have any questions concerning the technology, like you said that some people struggle to use it, it’s important to have someone in the background who can help out. No matter when or what you wonder about.” (C9) “Joy doing it. That you have fun doing it. I think that’s the most important thing and if it’s not enjoyable, it’s not possible.” (C7) |
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Hoel, V.; Ambugo, E.A.; Wolf-Ostermann, K. Sustaining Our Relationship: Dyadic Interactions Supported by Technology for People with Dementia and Their Informal Caregivers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 10956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710956
Hoel V, Ambugo EA, Wolf-Ostermann K. Sustaining Our Relationship: Dyadic Interactions Supported by Technology for People with Dementia and Their Informal Caregivers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(17):10956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710956
Chicago/Turabian StyleHoel, Viktoria, Eliva Atieno Ambugo, and Karin Wolf-Ostermann. 2022. "Sustaining Our Relationship: Dyadic Interactions Supported by Technology for People with Dementia and Their Informal Caregivers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 17: 10956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710956
APA StyleHoel, V., Ambugo, E. A., & Wolf-Ostermann, K. (2022). Sustaining Our Relationship: Dyadic Interactions Supported by Technology for People with Dementia and Their Informal Caregivers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(17), 10956. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710956