Using acupressure and Montessori-based activities to decrease agitation for residents with dementia: a cross-over trial
Contact Information
Keywords
Li-Chan Lin, lichan@ym.edu.tw
acupressure; Montessori methods; agitation; long-term care facilities
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To explore the effectiveness of acupressure and Montessori-based activities in decreasing the agitated behaviors of residents with dementia. DESIGN: A double-blinded, randomized (two treatments and one control; three time periods) cross-over design was used. SETTING: Six special care units for residents with dementia in long-term care facilities in Taiwan were the sites for the study. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred thirty-three institutionalized residents with dementia. INTERVENTION: Subjects were randomized into three treatment sequences: acupressure-presence-Montessori methods, Montessori methods-acupressure-presence and presence-Montessori methods-acupressure. All treatments were done once a day, 6 days per week, for a 4-week period. MEASUREMENT: The Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory, Ease-of-Care, and the Apparent Affect Rating Scale. RESULTS: After receiving the intervention, the acupressure and Montessori-based-activities groups saw a significant decrease in agitated behaviors, aggressive behaviors, and physically nonaggressive behaviors than the presence group. Additionally, the ease-of-care ratings for the acupressure and Montessori-based-activities groups were significantly better than for the presence group. In terms of apparent affect, positive affect in the Montessori-based-activities group was significantly better than in the presence group. CONCLUSION: This study confirms that a blending of traditional Chinese medicine and a Western activities program would be useful in elderly care and that in-service training for formal caregivers in the use of these interventions would be beneficial for patients.
Citation
Lin, L. C., Yang, M. H., Kao, C. C., Wu, S. C., Tang, S. H., & Lin, J. G. (2009). Using acupressure and Montessori-based activities to decrease agitation for residents with dementia: a cross-over trial. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 57(6), 1022–1029. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2009.02271.x
DOI
10.1111/j.1532-5415.2009.02271.x
EWB Constructs:
(3) Positive Affect
EWB Measures:
Apparent Affect Rating Scale
data availability:
No
data availability details:
N/A
brain imaging paradigm:
N/A
N/A
brain region/circuit:
Exclusion Criteria:
not stated
Inclusion Criteria
(1) Being diagnosed with dementia by a physician and documented as such on the resident’s chart.
(2) Scoring 35 or above on the long form of the Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI) for institutional use.18
(3) Ability to stay in the institution during the study period.
(4) No broken skin, infection, or amputation found on the acupressure points selected for the study
Non-EWB Behavioral
Measures:
Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory,
Ease-of-Care
First author:
Li-Chan Lin
species:
Human
sample size:
133
study design:
(5) RCT
longitudinal data?
Yes
younger controls?
No
interventions:
acupressure and Montessori-based activities
study population:
(2) patients with (pre)clinical dementia
sex (% female):
26.32%
ethnicity (%white)
not stated (Taiwan)
Age (mean, sd):
80.1, 8.1
biological/Physiological Measures:
N/A