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Group CST Using Zoom: A Proof of Concept Study

University College London (UCL) logo

University College London (UCL)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Dementia

Treatments

Other: Online Cognitive Stimulation Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04695743
17127/002

Details and patient eligibility

About

People living with dementia (PLWD) often struggle to access services and treatment which may benefit their emotional and cognitive wellbeing, as well as disease progression. Transport provision; hospital access and restricted mobility are barriers that often deny people the opportunity to receive treatment in-line with NICE guidelines. Considering the current Covid-19 pandemic, hospital access and face-to-face treatment is even more limited at present; with services across the UK unable to offer their usual levels of care and support. This is particularly the case for people in vulnerable groups. Therefore, many services have been considering the potential of remote-access therapy, specifically the use of video-conferencing apps. During the covid-19 crisis and beyond, it is of urgent and practical need that we develop more accessible, innovative home-based group interventions to people with dementia that can be delivered remotely. A group at The University of Hong Kong, are undertaking a study entitled 'FaceCog' which involves the delivery of Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) via the video-conferencing application 'Zoom'. CST is an established, evidence-based group intervention shown to improve quality of life and slow down cognitive deterioration in PLWD. In collaboration with the Hong Kong 'FaceCog' team, we propose to deliver a culturally adapted version of their Zoom-CST protocol in the UK in a proof of concept study during the current Covid-19 pandemic. The facecog Zoom-CST protocol is the first virtual CST protocol of its kind that we are aware of. It closely follows the original, evidence-based CST manual that was developed in the UK. It has been slightly adapted to make it useable on a virtual platform and to be culturally sensitive for use in Hong Kong. It incorporates all key elements and principles that have been evidenced to make the treatment effective. As we are delivering it in the UK, we will be using activities from the original manual, in place of the activities that have been adapted for the Hong Kong protocol. For example, we will use British phrases in the word games session rather than Chinese proverbs.

Data on recruitment, attrition, attendance data, focus groups, participant-completed session feedback forms and qualitative post-session interviews, will offer us the opportunity to assess intervention acceptability. Outcomes related to cognition, quality of life and mood will allow us to make inferences about the potential for clinical impacts of such an intervention. Engagement analysis will allow us to explore the potential barriers and facilitators to virtual-delivered CST for this population and highlight any potential adaptations to intervention which may be needed. This project is intended as a preliminary exploration which will pave the way for future intervention-modifications and pilot-studies which can evaluate the potential benefits of 'virtually'-delivered CST.

This research aims to:

  • Modify a pre-existing Zoom-CST protocol (FaceCog HK) to be culturally relevant and deliverable remotely within the UK.
  • Modify and develop resources for the groups, along with dementia-friendly 'how to' guides on using the chosen video-conferencing application.
  • Consult with stakeholders (including staff working within dementia care - clinical staff, charity organisations, and PLWD and their carers) about the potential foreseen barriers and facilitators to successful implementation of virtual-CST. Two remote, 'virtual' focus groups are proposed, one for professionals, and one for PLWD and/or informal carers.
  • Asses virtual CST's feasibility as guided by Orsmond and Cohn's (2015) discussion article on this topic, which identifies objectives of feasibility studies as, an evaluation of recruitment capability and sample characteristics, data collection procedures and outcome measures, the acceptability and suitability of the intervention and study procedures, the resources and ability to manage and implement the study and intervention, participants' responses to the intervention.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria:

  • Must have a clinical diagnosis of dementia and be within the 'mild-moderate' stages of disease progression.
  • Must be able to communicate verbally in English.
  • Must have capacity to consent to complete measures and to consent to video recording of the individual sessions.
  • Must have access to a device capable of video-conferencing and internet at home.
  • Must not be accessing any other psychosocial intervention (I.e. psychological therapy) at the time of participation

Exclusion criteria

  • Not having a clinical diagnosis of dementia or being within the 'moderate- sever' stages of disease progression
  • Not being able to communicate verbally in English
  • Not have the capacity to take consent to participation
  • Not have access to a device capable of video-conferencing and internet at home.
  • If the person is accessing any other psychosocial intervention (I.e. psychological therapy) at the time of participation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

50 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Attendance at online CST groups
Treatment:
Other: Online Cognitive Stimulation Therapy
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Treatment as usual

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Aimee Spector; Luke Perkins

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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