Effect of Doll Therapy in Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Bibliographic Search and Inclusion Criteria
2.2. Data Review, Selection, and Extraction
2.3. Assessment of Risk of Bias in Individual Studies
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- Low risk of bias: articles in which every item obtained a low risk of bias.
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- Unclear risk of bias: those studies in which one or more items had an unclear risk of bias.
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- High risk of bias: studies in which one or more items had a high risk of bias.
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the Studies and Participants Included
3.2. Risk of Bias of Individual Studies
3.3. Intervention with Doll Therapy
3.4. Effectiveness of Doll Therapy on Behaviour
3.5. Effectiveness of Doll Therapy on Emotions
3.6. Effectiveness of Doll Therapy on the Basic Activities of Daily Living
4. Discussion
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- Doll therapy reduces psychological and behavioral symptoms of dementia.
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- It is beneficial to follow a six phase protocol for treatment (evaluation, introduction of the doll, assessment of the reaction, presentation of the doll, care of the doll, and the removal of the doll).
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- The prolonged duration of doll therapy allows for achieving more benefits.
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- Future studies must include the randomization and the blinding of the assessment to increase the methodological quality.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Balzotti [32] | Cantarella [29] | Cohen-Mansfield, [28] | Mackenzie, [30] | Moyle, [31] | Shin, [20] | Yilmaz, [36] | |
1A | NO | NO | NO | NO | X | NO | X |
1B | X | X | X | NO | X | NO | X |
2A | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
2B | X | X | X | X | X | NO | X |
3A | NO | NO | NO | X | X | X | X |
3B | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO |
4A | X | X | X | NO | X | X | X |
4B | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
5 | X | X | X | X | X | NO | X |
6A | X | X | X | NO | X | X | X |
6B | X | X | X | NO | NO | NO | NO |
7A | NO | NO | NO | NO | X | X | X |
7B | NO | X | NO | NO | X | NO | NO |
8A | NO | NO | X | NO | X | NO | X |
8B | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO |
9 | NO | NO | NO | NO | X | NO | X |
10 | NO | NO | NO | NO | X | NO | NO |
11A | X | NO | NO | NO | X | N | X |
11B | X | X | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO |
12A | X | X | X | NO | X | NO | X |
12B | X | NO | NO | NO | X | NO | NO |
13A | NO | NO | X | NO | X | NO | X |
13B | X | X | NO | NO | X | NO | X |
14A | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | X | NO |
14B | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
15 | X | X | NO | X | X | NO | X |
16 | X | X | NO | X | X | NO | X |
17A | NO | X | X | NO | X | NO | X |
17B | NO | X | NO | NO | X | NO | X |
18 | X | NO | X | NO | NO | NO | NO |
19 | NO | NO | X | X | X | X | X |
20 | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
21 | X | NO | NO | NO | X | X | NO |
22 | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
23 | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
24 | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO | NO |
25 | NO | NO | X | NO | X | NO | X |
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Author | Type of Study and Participants | Characteristics of the Intervention of Doll Therapy | Results | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n | Study | Age (Yrs) | Sex | Inclusion Criteria | Emplacement | Experimental Group | Control Group | Outcome Measure | ||
Moyle, 2018 [29] | 35 | RCT | <65 years | Female | <65 years, dementia diagnosis; documented history (in last four weeks) of anxiety, agitation, or aggressiveness. | Residents were recruited from five LTC facilities located within a 60 km radius of the Brisbane Central Business District (Queensland, Australia) | Doll Therapy | Usual treatment | Mini Mental CMAI-SF; OERS | Clinically significant improvements in the well-being of residents in comparison with the usual care, but there were no improvements in anxiety, agitation, and aggressiveness. |
Balzoti 2018 [31] | 30 | Non-randomized clinical trial | <65 years | 25 Females 10 Males | Severe to low cognitive impairment, behavioral disorders, <65 years, dementia. | Residenza Sociosanitaria Assistenziale per Anziani “Storelli” in Bisceglie (Italia) | 1. Doll therapy 2. Gestural-verbal treatment | No intervention | NPI-Q | Doll therapy was effective for the reduction of agitated and irritable behaviors. No changes in apathy were found. |
Cantarella, 2018 [28] | 32 | RCT | <70 years | 26 Females 6 Males | Punctuation of ≥5 in the Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire; <70 years; dementia diagnosis, post-traumatic stress disorder according to doctors; no participation in other non-pharmacological interventions before or during the study; without severe sensorial or perceptive deficiencies or ongoing mourning; and the capacity of understanding easy messages and producing sentences. | Residential facilities | Doll Therapy | Hand-warmer | SPMSQ EBS | Significative reduction in post-traumatic stress disorder, relief of negative feelings, fulfilling of attachment needs, and the reduction of the feeling of loneliness. Several aspects that influence food intake, such as anguish, improved but not enough to improve the eating behavior. |
Yilmaz, 2020 [30] | 29 | RCT | 82–89 years | 15 Females 14 Males | Moderate-severe dementia, motor abilities needed to hold and caress a doll, adequate visual and auditive functions, and ability to communicate in Turkish. | A. KadirU¨ c¸yıldız, elder facility | Doll Therapy | No intervention | SMMSE CMAI NPI-Q | Statistically significant improvements in agitation and behavior problems. Cognition did not improve. |
Shin, 2015 [20] | 62 | pre-post | 82.4 years | 86.3% Females 74.5% Males | Slight-severe cognitive impairment, three months residing in the nursing home. | Korea nursing home | Doll Therapy | - | SMMSE QUALID | Statistically significant decrease in the use of swear words, shouts, aggressive episodes, and less obsessive behaviors. Erratic wandering episodes were reduced as well. There were found positive changes in moods and physical appearance, a decrease of depression, and an increment of the interactions with other individuals, but without significant differences. |
Mackenzie, 2006 [33] | 14 | Pilot study | 75–94 years | 12 Females 2 Males | - | Nursing home | Doll Therapy | - | Ad hoc questionnaire | Increase in social interaction. The participants seemed to be happier and less agitated. They were also more receptive towards personal care activities; erratic wandering episodes were reduced. |
Cohen-Mansfield, 2014 [32] | 93 | Exploratory study | 85.9 years | 73% Females | Three months residing at a nursing home, behavior disorders, <60, dementia diagnosis. | Maryland nursing home | Doll Therapy | - | MMSE CAR LMBS | There was a rejection of Doll Therapy; it is associated with a low social level. In spite of this, it was one of the most used therapies and obtained a relatively high rate for the impact on the behavioral symptoms. |
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Martín-García, A.; Corregidor-Sánchez, A.-I.; Fernández-Moreno, V.; Alcántara-Porcuna, V.; Criado-Álvarez, J.-J. Effect of Doll Therapy in Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2022, 10, 421. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030421
Martín-García A, Corregidor-Sánchez A-I, Fernández-Moreno V, Alcántara-Porcuna V, Criado-Álvarez J-J. Effect of Doll Therapy in Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2022; 10(3):421. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030421
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartín-García, Angela, Ana-Isabel Corregidor-Sánchez, Virginia Fernández-Moreno, Vanesa Alcántara-Porcuna, and Juan-José Criado-Álvarez. 2022. "Effect of Doll Therapy in Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 10, no. 3: 421. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030421
APA StyleMartín-García, A., Corregidor-Sánchez, A. -I., Fernández-Moreno, V., Alcántara-Porcuna, V., & Criado-Álvarez, J. -J. (2022). Effect of Doll Therapy in Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 10(3), 421. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030421