Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02733939

Technologies to Reduce Caregiver Burden for Informal Caregivers of People With Dementia

Åldrande: en Innovativ Och teknologistödd hemmiljö för äldre Patienter Med Alzheimers Sjukdom, TECH@HOME.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (actual)
Sponsor
Lund University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This randomized controlled trial aims to recruit a total of 320 dyads composed by persons with dementia living in community settings and their primary informal caregivers. In the intervention group, persons with dementia will have a home monitoring kit installed in the household while participants in the control group will receive their usual care. The kit includes home leaving sensors, smoke and water leak sensors, bed sensors as well as automatic lights that monitor the individual's behavior. Alerts (text message and/or phone call) will be sent to the caregiver if anything unusual occurs. All study participants will receive three home visits by project administrators that have received project specific training in order to harmonize data collection. These will take place at enrollment and 3 and 12 months following installation of the home kits. At every home visit, a standardized questionnaire will be administered to all study participants to assess their health, quality of life and resource utilization. The primary outcome of this trial is the amount of informal care support provided by primary informal caregivers to the Person with Dementia.

Detailed description

While the enormous technological progress made in recent years has put technologies, such as mobile devices and smart phones, in the reach of many, innovators in dementia care are just starting to explore the full potential of these developments to transform them into valuable products and services for users. There is indeed a lack of studies that evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of these new technologically-enriched interventions targeted at people with dementia. Previous large scale evaluations of the impact of telemedicine and telecare, such as the Whole Demonstrator System in the United Kingdom, did not include people with dementia despite Alzheimer's disease being one of the most burdensome diseases in Europe. This randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate the effects of new technologies on caregiver burden by reducing the time spent in supervision. The trial builds on previous promising results from the UP-TECH project in Italy (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01700556) . The technologies used in TECH@HOME will include similar, but improved, home monitoring kits potentially leading to a greater impact on caregivers' caring conditions. In addition, while the UP-TECH study did not allow the researchers to estimate the impact of the technology as a "stand-alone" intervention (the monitoring kits were only given in combination with case-management support), TECH@HOME will overcome this limitation thanks to the possibility to compare a group of technology users vs. non-users. Results from this intervention in dementia care in Sweden hold the potential to inform regional and national policy makers in Sweden and beyond.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHome monitoring kitThe home monitoring kits notify the caregivers about potentially dangerous situations, such as when the person with dementia: * leaves the home without notice, since this might occur in a moment of disorientation; * leaves a water tap open; * forgets something on the stove; * gets out of bed during the night and doesn't come back within a certain time interval; * never goes to the bathroom in 24 hours; * never opens refrigerator door in 24 hours. Depending on the personal choice of the study participants, the kit will also : * automatically turn on a light to help avoid a fall during the night; * alert the caregiver when the temperature in the house falls or rises excessively; * act as burglar alarm in some areas of the home.

Timeline

Start date
2016-03-01
Primary completion
2019-05-01
Completion
2019-05-01
First posted
2016-04-12
Last updated
2019-08-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Sweden

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02733939. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.