Living Memory Home-4-Dementia Care Pairs

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to evaluate an online platform -- the Living Memory Home for Dementia Care Pairs (LMH-4-DCP) for persons with dementia and their family caregivers to engage in reminiscence activities together and record meaningful memories. The main aims of this study are: - To evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the LMH-4-DCP platform. - To explore the potential for LMH-4-DCP to reduce feelings of pre-loss grief and enhancing relationship quality in dementia family caregivers and their care-recipients ('Care-Pairs') Care pair participants will be asked to log-in to LMH-4-DCP and complete study activities three times per week for two weeks. Researchers will compare the intervention group to an attention control condition to see if LMH-4-DCP's use is associated with reduced feelings of caregiver pre-loss grief and improved care pair relationship quality at follow-up.

Condition

  • Dyadic Family Caregiver-person With Dementia Online Intervention

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

Family Caregivers: - be a primary source of care for a family member in the early to moderate stages of dementia - 18 years of age or older - English-speaking - able to use the internet and has internet access - residing in the United States

Exclusion Criteria

Caregiver exclusion criteria: - is not the primary family caregiver of the PwD - under the age of 18-years-old - exhibits cognitive impairment (by scoring 3 or more on the SPMSQ) - does not speak English as a primary language. PwD exclusion criteria: - severe cognitive impairment detected by the clinical or study staff using validated, brief screening tools (e.g., a score of 8 errors or more on the SPMSQ) - does not demonstrate capacity to consent (e.g., a score of 9 or fewer errors on the University of California-San Diego Brief Assessment of Capacity to consent - PwD is living in a long-term care facility - does not speak English as a primary language - is under the age of 18 years old.

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Supportive Care
Masking
Single (Participant)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
LMH-4-DCP Intervention
  • Behavioral: LMH-4-DCP
    Reminiscence-based intervention for family caregiver-Persons with Dementia (PwD) dyads to record and reflect on meaningful memories to address family caregivers' pre-loss grief and enhance relationship quality.
Active Comparator
Attention Control Arm
  • Behavioral: LMH-4-DCP access without reminiscence activities
    Participants in the attention control condition will have access to a version of LMH-4-DCP excluding reminiscence-specific activities.

Recruiting Locations

Weill Cornell Medicine
New York, New York 10021
Contact:
Sydney C Saviano, B.A
sys4002@med.cornell.edu

More Details

NCT ID
NCT06225986
Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Weill Medical College of Cornell University

Study Contact

Sydney C Saviano, B.A.
646-962-5637
sys4002@med.cornell.edu

Detailed Description

The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the Living Memory Home for Dementia Care Pairs (LMH-4-DCP) web application, a dyadic online psychosocial reminiscence platform, to reduce feelings of pre-loss grief and improve relationship quality in individuals with dementia and their family caregivers ('Care Pairs'). The main aims of this study are: - To evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the LMH-4-DCP platform. - To explore the influence of the LMH-4-DCP intervention on reducing feelings of pre-loss grief and enhancing relationship quality in the care pair Caregiver participants randomized to the intervention condition will be asked to log-in to LMH-4-DCP and complete reminiscence activities three times per week for two weeks. Researchers will compare the intervention group to an attention control condition, which includes LMH-4-DCP use without reminiscence-specific features, to see if LMH-4-DCP's use is associated with reduced feelings of caregiver pre-loss grief and improved care pair relationship quality at follow-up.