The Namaste Care intervention to improve the quality of dying for people with advanced dementia living in care homes: A realist review and feasibility study for a cluster randomised controlled trial

Study Code / Acronym
Namaste Care
Award Number
15/10/11
Programme
Health Technology Assessment
Status / Stage
Completed
Dates
1 December 2016 -
1 April 2019
Duration (calculated)
02 years 04 months
Funder(s)
NIHR
Funding Amount
£507,530.84
Funder/Grant study page
NIHR
Contracted Centre
Lancaster University
Contracted Centre Webpage
Principal Investigator
Professor Katherine Froggatt
PI ORCID
0000-0003-0339-3877
WHO Catergories
Models across the continuum of care
Tools and methodologies for interventions
Disease Type
Severe Dementia

CPEC Review Info
Reference ID136
ResearcherReside Team
Published12/06/2023

Data

Study Code / AcronymNamaste Care
Award Number15/10/11
Status / StageCompleted
Start Date20161201
End Date20190401
Duration (calculated) 02 years 04 months
Funder/Grant study pageNIHR
Contracted CentreLancaster University
Contracted Centre Webpage
Funding Amount£507,530.84

Abstract

Many people with advanced dementia live and die in nursing care homes (NCHs). The quality of life, care and dying experienced is variable. There is a need to identify appropriate, cost effective interventions that facilitate high quality end of life care provision appropriate for this population.To establish the feasibility of conducting a cluster controlled trial in nursing care homes to understand the impact on quality of dying of the Namaste Care intervention for people with advanced dementia, compared to usual end of life care. Design: a) Realist Evidence review: To determine which Namaste care intervention elements work best for people dying with advanced dementia in the NCH context. b) Intervention Refinement: Consultation workshop with care home staff (n=8-12 from 4 NCHs) and family members of people with advanced dementia, using findings from the Realist Review to refine the Namaste Care intervention. c) Feasibilty study in context of a cluster controlled trial: A feasibility study in 8 sites (6 intervention and 2 control) in the context of a cluster controlled trial (and embedded qualitative process and economic evaluation) to facilitate future design and measurement choices for a full trial. Setting: Nursing care homes (NCH) in England. Target population: Patient: People with advanced dementia (FAST=6-7) prognosis<3months. Informal carer: Main family or informal carer. NCH staff: Care staff paid to provide care in NCHs. Trial Inclusion criteria: NCHs providing palliative care for people with advanced dementia using an established palliative care intervention. Health technology: Namaste Care is a complex intervention delivering proactive structured care focused on enhancements to the physical environment, comfort assessment and management, and sensory engagement incorporating personalised activities to reflect an individual's life story and preferences. Proposed primary/secondary outcomes and tools: A feasibility aim is to establish the appropriateness, acceptability, timing and administration of instruments for a full trial. We consider two contender primary outcomes for a full trial: (1) quality of dying (dementia) (CAD-EOLD) and (2) quality of life (QUALID). Secondary outcomes include sleep/activity (using actigraphy); neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPI-NH); pain (PAIN-AD). Informal carer outcomes: satisfaction with care at the end of life (EOLD-SWC). Staff outcomes: care giving experiences (ZARIT Burden Scale), satisfaction with care in end of life care (EOLD-SWC). Health Economic outcomes: EQ-5D-5L, ICECAP-O and ICECAP-SCM. Other data: medication/service use (medical records), work activity (staff diary). Sample size: People with advanced dementia (n=64) from 8 clusters; NCHs randomised to Namaste Care (n=6) or control (n=2) Analysis: Primary end point will be determined. Reporting will focus on recruitment, response and completion rates, and missing data. Proxy agreement will be determined. Estimates of standard deviation and intracluster correlation coefficent will be made for definitive trial design. No formal statistical tests of intervention effect will be performed. Process evaluation data will be analysed quantitatively (through descriptive statistics) and qualitatively (using Framework Analysis). Unit cost information will be applied to resource use data to provide initial estimates of cost-effectiveness, identifying drivers of efficiency.

Aims

To establish the feasibility of conducting a cluster controlled trial in nursing care homes to understand the impact on quality of dying of the Namaste Care intervention for people with advanced dementia, compared to usual end of life care.