4.5 Review

A systematic review of communication strategies for people with dementia in residential and nursing homes

Journal

INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOGERIATRICS
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 189-200

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1041610209990615

Keywords

psychosocial intervention; nonpharmacological intervention; residential facilities

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Background: The impairment of verbal skills of people with dementia challenges communication. The aim of this review was to study the effects of nonpharmacological interventions in residential and nursing homes on (1) communication between residents with dementia and care staff, and (2) the neuropsychiatric symptoms of residents with dementia. Method: Pubmed, PsychInfo, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library, and reference lists from relevant publications were systematically searched to find articles about controlled interventions with communication strategies. The data collected were pooled and subjected to a meta-analysis. Results: Nineteen intervention studies were selected for this review. They included structured and communicative sessions at set times for residents (e.g. life review) and communication techniques in activities of daily care applied by care staff (e.g. sensitivity to nonverbal communication). A meta-analysis of five set-time interventions (communication) and another meta-analysis of four set-time interventions (neuropsychiatric outcomes) found no significant overall effects. Individual set-time intervention studies report positive effects on communication when interventions are single-task sessions, like life review or one-on-one conversation. Interventions around daily care activities had positive effects on communication outcomes. Effects of both types of interventions on neuropsychiatric symptoms were divergent. Conclusion: This review indicates that care staff can improve their communication with residents with dementia when strategies are embedded in daily care activities or interventions are single-task sessions at set times. These results offer the possibility of improving the quality of care, but not of directly reducing neuropsychiatric symptoms. More research is needed to study the effect of communication interventions on neuropsychiatric symptoms.

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