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MindMate: A Study of a Reminder System for People With Dementia

NHS Trust logo

NHS Trust

Status

Completed

Conditions

Dementia

Treatments

Other: MindMate

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02908997
GN16NE538

Details and patient eligibility

About

A study to investigate the effectiveness of a reminder tool application at increasing performance on memory tasks in people with mild dementia

Full description

Background

Memory difficulties are a core feature of dementia. These include difficulties remembering to do something at a specific time and place in the future (Prospective Memory). Although a range of electronic prospective memory aids currently exist (e.g. "Neuropage"), the evidence supporting their use among the dementia population remains limited. "Mindmate" is a recently developed mobile application that aims to support individuals with a diagnosis of dementia, improving self-management skills and quality of life.

Aims

This study will explore the effectiveness of "MindMate" reminder alerts delivered to a smart phone or tablet computer as a memory aid for people with a diagnosis of Mild Dementia.

Method

Three participants with a diagnosis of dementia, who are considered to be in the early stages and who report everyday prospective memory difficulties, will be recruited from Older People Community Mental Health teams within Greater Glasgow and Clyde. The participants will own a smart phone or tablet and will be living with a partner or family member who will also participate in the study. During the initial baseline phase, the partner or family member will monitor the number of pre defined tasks the participant remembered and forgot. The partner or family member will record this information on a weekly monitoring form and this phase will last between five to seven weeks. This will be followed by a five-week intervention phase where "MindMate" reminder alerts will be sent to the participant's phone or tablet. Again, tasks that require remembering will be identified prior to the intervention phase, and family members or carers will monitor their success on a form. Results will be analysed using visual inspection and Tau-U analysis.

Applications

This study will provide information on the effectiveness of a form of assistive technology at supporting people with a dementia, which could improve quality of life of those with a diagnosis.

Enrollment

3 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • has a diagnosis of Mild Dementia, according to International Classification of Diseases (ICD) 10 Criteria
  • has received the diagnosis from a psychiatrist
  • owns a smart phone or tablet
  • has a family member/partner/carer who is willing to monitor memory aid use
  • has capacity to consent to being involved in the research
  • is reporting memory difficulties that are affecting them in daily life

Exclusion criteria

  • visual or auditory difficulties which cannot be corrected through the use of appropriate aids
  • has a pre-existing neurological or severe psychiatric problem (e.g. bipolar disorder, psychosis)
  • has a diagnosis of dementia that is considered to be in the moderate to severe stages
  • those whose first language is not English
  • those with a diagnosed or suspected developmental learning disability
  • those who are currently using online or electronic memory aids

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

3 participants in 3 patient groups

5 week baseline
Experimental group
Description:
5 week baseline data collection followed by 6 week MindMate intervention
Treatment:
Other: MindMate
6 week baseline
Experimental group
Description:
6 week baseline data collection followed by 6 week MindMate intervention
Treatment:
Other: MindMate
7 week baseline
Experimental group
Description:
7 week baseline data collection followed by 6 week MindMate intervention
Treatment:
Other: MindMate

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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