Valuing Active Life In Dementia

Study Code / Acronym
VALID
Award Number
RP-PG-0610-10108
Programme
Programme Grants for Applied Research
Status / Stage
Completed
Dates
1 January 2012 -
1 July 2018
Duration (calculated)
06 years 06 months
Funder(s)
NIHR
Funding Amount
£2,169,625.00
Funder/Grant study page
NIHR
Contracted Centre
North East London NHS Foundation Trust
Contracted Centre Webpage
Principal Investigator
Professor Martin Orrell
PI Contact
M.Orrell@nottingham.ac.uk
WHO Catergories
Development of novel therapies
Disease Type
Dementia (Unspecified)

CPEC Review Info
Reference ID55
ResearcherReside Team
Published12/06/2023

Data

Study Code / AcronymVALID
Award NumberRP-PG-0610-10108
Status / StageCompleted
Start Date20120101
End Date20180701
Duration (calculated) 06 years 06 months
Funder/Grant study pageNIHR
Contracted CentreNorth East London NHS Foundation Trust
Contracted Centre Webpage
Funding Amount£2,169,625.00

Abstract

Home orientated care is a key objective of the National Dementia Strategy and this study addresses the government’s commitment to dementia research. In the UK over 700,000 older people have dementia and two thirds of these live in the community. Dementia leads to deterioration in activities of daily living and reduced ability in social and functional activities. The NICE/SCIE guidelines for dementia recommend advice and skills training from an OT to help maintain independence. Individualised interventions improve family carer well-being, delay admission to care homes and reduce the risk of institutionalisation by one third. Few studies have evaluated occupational therapy (OT) for people with dementia living at home. In the Netherlands, the community occupational therapy intervention for dementia (COTID) trial (Graff et al 2006) demonstrated cost effectiveness and benefits to skills, activities of daily living (ADL), quality of life and depression in people with dementia, and to carer’s quality of life, mood and sense of competence. COTID has great potential for adoption in the UK. Research Plans: WP1: This involves adaptation and translation of the COTID guidelines for the UK and involves OTs, people with dementia and carers, the voluntary sector and a consensus conference. WP2: A UK survey of OT practice will evaluate the barriers/facilitators to implementing COTID in practice. WP3: The pilot/feasibility trial has 2 arms: COTID vs treatment as usual (TAU) with 25 people with dementia and their carers in each. All OTs will have completed training and achieved fidelty to COTID. This will also indicate recruitment rates and field test the outcome measures for time required for completion, feasibility, and applicability. WP4: Definitive RCT: A multi-centre, pragmatic, single blind randomised controled trial of COTID vs TAU for people with dementia living in community settings, who have a family carer. COTID involves 10 sessions of home based OT over 5 weeks working with the carer and person with dementia to improve skills in daily activities, and caregivers’ skills and sense of competence. Assessments at baseline, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 26 weeks (primary end point). Primary outcome: Bristol Activities of Daily Living Scale (BADLS). Secondary outcomes: Costs, quality of life, and carers quality of life. The primary analysis will be intention to treat and use the 26 week assessment of BADLS to compare the intervention and TAU groups. A sample size of 535 will have 90% power (with p = 0.05) to detect an effect size of 0.35. Qualitative data including transcripts of focus groups and interviews will be analysed using framework analysis. The primary economic evaluation will be a cost-utility analysis from an NHS and personal social services perspective. Data management, quality control, statistics/methodology support, and registration of patients, and randomisation will be managed by PRIMENT clinical trials unit. WP5: Implementation: 30 trained OTs will each implement COTID with 10 people with dementia. Basic outcomes include BADLS, QoL-AD, and SF12. This will determine feasibility and effectiveness in usual clinical practice as relevant to research, services and commissioners. A budget impact analysis will examine what the total NHS costs would be if COTID was rolled out nationally. Research Team: VALID builds on existing work by the applicants in psychosocial research, and clinical trials of complex interventions in dementia care. Research Environment: NELFT covers 4 boroughs in North East London within which around 9000+ people have dementia. It has a strong R&D Department and is well supported by North Thames DENDRON. Outputs, outcomes and impact: Website with COTID Manual/DVD and fidelit

Aims

To adapt, develop, evaluate and implement an occupation based intervention to promote independence, meaningful activity and quality of life for people with dementia and their carers living in the community.