Life Sciences & Biomedicine Rehabilitation Science & Technology
Importance: Neuropsychiatric behaviors of persons with dementia, including agitation, aggression, and rejection of care, are almost universal; occur throughout the disease process; and have negative consequences for both persons with dementia and their caregivers. Nonpharmacological approaches are now recognized as first-line treatment to address these behaviors. One promising approach is activity tailored to the person's interests, abilities, and physical and social environment. An evidence-based program, New Ways for Better Days: Tailoring Activities for Persons With Dementia and Their Caregivers (TAP), draws on occupational therapy principles (person-environment-occupation fit, activity analysis) to meaningfully engage persons with dementia.
Objective: This case report describes the TAP protocol and clinical reasoning processes underlying use of tailored activities as a therapeutic modality to address dementia-related neuropsychiatric behaviors.
Design: This is a case study of an African-American woman in her 60s caring for her father, age 92, who has severe dementia and multiple behaviors.
Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcomes in this case report include the person with dementia's engagement in an activity and the reported neuropsychiatric behaviors. In addition, the caregiver's confidence in using activities is reported. These and other measures from the TAP protocol are described in full.
Results: After working with an occupational therapist for eight sessions, the person with dementia's engagement in activity increased by 50% and his frequency of vocal disturbance decreased, and the caregiver felt more confident in using activities with her father.
Conclusion and Relevance: This case report illustrates how occupational therapists working with families of persons with dementia can use the TAP protocol to help them manage neuropsychiatric behaviors by tailoring activities.
What This Article Adds: Occupational therapists are uniquely qualified to systematically assess the cognitive functioning of persons with dementia, caregivers, and home environments and to integrate this information to derive and implement activities tailored to the person's capacities and context, thereby reducing neuropsychiatric behaviors and increasing engagement in meaningful activity.
Tailored Activities to Reduce Neuropsychiatric Behaviors in Persons With Dementia: Case Report
Creators
Katherine A. Marx - Johns Hopkins University
Janie B. Scott - Johns Hopkins University
Catherine Verrier Piersol - Jefferson College
Laura N. Gitlin - Drexel University
Publication Details
The American journal of occupational therapy, v 73(2), pp 7302205160-p9
Publisher
Amer Occupational Therapy Assoc, Inc
Number of pages
9
Grant note
R01AGO41781 / National Institutes of Health; United States Department of Health & Human Services; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA
R01AG041781 / NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING; United States Department of Health & Human Services; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA; NIH National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Resource Type
Journal article
Language
English
Academic Unit
College of Nursing and Health Professions
Web of Science ID
WOS:000466469000017
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85063933409
Other Identifier
991019168070004721
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