Technologies to Reduce Caregiver Burden for Informal Caregivers of People With Dementia (TECH@HOME)
Dementia
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Dementia focused on measuring technology, informal care, caregiver burden
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria for the person with dementia:
- a diagnose of major neurocognitive disorders with mild to moderate severity (DSM-5) (following the new diagnostic criteria of the American Psychiatric Association;
- A score between 10 and 24 on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE-SR);
- A score between 1 and 5 in the Global Deterioration Scale (GDS)
- Community dwelling;
- Able to speak and understand Swedish;
- Have at least one informal caregiver.
Exclusion Criteria for the person with dementia:
- Lack of informed consent;
- Being fully dependent on caregiver support for the Activities of Daily Living;
- Presence of severe diseases associated with a life expectancy of less than 6 months;
- Intention of moving to institutionalized care during the study period;
- Unwillingness to use technological devices for home assistance and safety;
- Being enrolled in another ongoing trial;
- Substance use disorder (DSM-5).
Specific inclusion criteria for the informal caregiver are:
- Lack of informed consent;
- Unwillingness to use technological devices for home assistance and safety;
- Presence of severe diseases associated with a life expectancy of less than 6 months;
- Being already enrolled in another ongoing trial.
Sites / Locations
- Memory Clinic, Hospital of Ängelholm
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Technology intervention
Usual care
Patients randomized in the intervention group will receive a technical home monitoring kit for 12 months. The kits will be composed of a control unit and a set of sensors that immediately notify caregivers, through their phones, of any potential risks for the person with dementia. The kit will have home leaving sensors, bed occupancy sensors, smoke and water leak sensors, automatic lights, and other interactive functions. These devices will be connected to a single-board microcontroller that will transmit alarm messages to the caregivers in case of need.
Patients receiving usual care, as provided to people with dementia in Southern Sweden can vary. In the target area, people with dementia usually receive comparable pharmaceutical treatment depending on the dementia type, as prescribed by a general practitioner or a specialist at a memory clinic. The social worker from the Municipality ("Biståndshandläggaren") where the person resides, together with the district nurse, have a meaningful role in tailoring the care plan by mediating access to other care services such as respite care homes, home help and (dementia) nurse home visits. Use of such services depends on the specific needs of the person with dementia, which can also be unrelated to dementia, but rather dependent upon concomitant health and social issues.