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Feasibility and Effectiveness of a Telehealth-Delivered Inductive Reasoning Training Program for Older Adults

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University of Florida

Status

Completed

Conditions

Reasoning Training

Treatments

Behavioral: Telehealth Reasoning Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05334186
IRB202101691

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study seeks to investigate 1) whether telehealth-delivered cognitive training in reasoning, adapted from the in-person reasoning training program from the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly (ACTIVE) clinical trial, is perceived well by older adult participants and therefore potentially feasible for future larger studies, and 2) whether the older adult participants improve as a function of telehealth-delivered reasoning training. More specifically, it proposes to investigate participants' perceptions of and compliance with a telehealth-delivered cognitive training intervention in reasoning and whether that intervention is effective in improving reasoning compared to ACTIVE's traditional face-to-face training and no-contact control groups. Innovations of the proposed study are: (a) to provide important insight into the participants' perceptions of and compliance with a telehealth-based cognitive training intervention in reasoning for older adults that could potentially be adapted in the future for clinical settings, and (b) to shed light on the relative effectiveness of telehealth-based cognitive training in reasoning.

Full description

The proposed study is a pre-test post-test design exploring the feasibility and effectiveness of a telehealth-delivered inductive reasoning training program. The current study converts the widely disseminated in-person inductive reasoning training program from a large multisite clinical trial (ACTIVE) to a telehealth-delivered format. This study also benefits from the ability to compare telehealth delivered training to two propensity-matched comparison groups drawn from the ACTIVE sample of 2,802 adults aged 65 and older. The current study addresses whether telehealth-delivered training can achieve inductive reasoning improvements in older adults. In addition, because the delivery of the training is novel, and important aspect of this study is to assess how telehealth-delivered cognitive training in inductive reasoning is evaluated by older adult participants in terms of usefulness, ease of use & learnability, interface quality, interaction quality, reliability, and satisfaction/anticipated future use of the telehealth intervention.

Enrollment

34 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65 to 100 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 65 years of age or older; have computer and internet; and are available during the duration of the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • 64 years of age or younger
  • Score < or = 22 on the Mini-Mental State Examination; have a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease
  • Have already experienced substantial functional decline (self-reported need for weight-bearing support or full caregiver performance of dressing, personal hygiene, or bathing 3 or more times in the previous 7 days)
  • Have medical conditions that would predispose them to imminent functional decline or death (e.g., stroke within the past 12 months, certain cancers, or current chemotherapy or radiation treatment for cancer)
  • Have recent cognitive training
  • Are unavailable during the testing and intervention phases of the study
  • Have severe losses in vision (self-reported difficulty in reading newsprint, or measured vision worse than 20/70 with best correction), hearing (interviewer-rated), or communicative ability (interviewer-rated) that would sufficiently impair performance to make participation impossible.
  • Participants will also be excluded if they do not meet the criteria for telehealth readiness (being able to use Zoom and Canvas [an e-learning platform]).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

34 participants in 1 patient group

Telehealth Reasoning Training
Experimental group
Description:
Telehealth-delivered inductive reasoning training will focus on improving the ability to solve problems that require linear thinking and that follow a serial pattern or sequence. Participants will be taught strategies to identify patterns to solve problems. These problems involve identifying the pattern in series of numbers and letters, or recognizing patterns in everyday activities, like dosing for medications. Training will consist of ten training sessions, over 5 weeks, and will be conducted over Zoom. Each training session is 60-75 minutes long and typically consists of (a) 10 minutes of introductory training exercises for basic mental abilities, such as finding patterns in schedules, (b) training exercises for everyday tasks, such as filling out medication charts, recycling charts, and understanding medicine bottle labels, and (c) a 20-question practice assessment.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Telehealth Reasoning Training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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