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Musicians United for Seniors to Improve Care (MUSIC) Study

McGill University logo

McGill University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Music
Emotions
Communication
Gait

Treatments

Behavioral: Mood Assessment
Behavioral: Emotion Assessment
Behavioral: Communication Assessment
Other: Documentary watching
Other: Mobility assessment
Other: Music Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03328793
SMHC 14-31B

Details and patient eligibility

About

Music has a potential role in health care. In the geriatric population, music presents a non-pharmacological intervention which is easy to implement. Also, music has a potential role in order to improve patient's mobility. For example, it was also shown that the rhythmic component of music combined with physical exercise can improve gait variability which has been identified as a marker of gait instability and a fall predictor. This effect was previously shown in older community dwellers as a music-based intervention significantly improved gait and balance stability.

Considering that music was shown to have a positive impact on communication, emotions and depressive symptoms this intervention has the potential to make our patients more conscious of their environment, leading to an improved mobility.

Thus, the investigators hypothesize that patients who attend live music sessions (compared to controls) will demonstrate an improvement in their mobility measures. This effect could potentially be explained by the rhythmic effect of music and by the fact that live music sessions lead to an improved mood, communication, emotions, and an improved mobility.

  • The primary objective of this study will be to determine if participation to live music sessions will be associated with an improvement in mobility which will be measured using the Times Up and Go (TUG) and gait speed when compared to a control group.
  • The second objective of this study will be to determine if patients participating in live music sessions compared to a control group demonstrate an increase/improvement at the end of their music session in their mood (the Visual Analog Mood Scale (VAMS) will be used), in their positive emotions (the Observed Emotion Rating Scale (OERS) will be used) and communication behaviour (the CODEM (tool to assess communication behavior in dementia) instrument will be used).
  • The third objective of this study will be to perform a "feasibility study". By measuring the variation in the different scales which will be used (see the third objective), the investigators will be able to determine how many participants will be necessary for an eventual larger scale study.

This will be a prospective open-label randomized control trial. The patients will be randomly assigned to a musical intervention or to a television intervention (control group). The patients will only attend one session in the context of this research project. Pre and post measures will be done.

Full description

Music has a potential role in health care. In patients with major neurocognitive impairment (previously called dementia), several studies have demonstrated that musical intervention can improve cognition, in particular spatial and temporal orientation, episodic memory and working memory. It was also shown that music may improve quality of life and reduce depressive symptoms, and there is growing evidence for the use of music to treat pain and anxiety.

When specifically looking at the geriatric population, music listening presents a non-pharmacological intervention which is easy to implement in inpatients with functional decline. It was shown to improve mood in both cognitively impaired and intact patients.

Music has a potential role in order to improve patient's mobility. For example, it was also shown that the rhythmic component of music combined with physical exercise can improve gait variability which has been identified as a marker of gait instability and a fall predictor. This effect was previously shown in older community dwellers as a music-based intervention significantly improved gait and balance stability.

Also, considering that music was shown to have a positive impact on communication, emotions and depressive symptoms, this intervention therefore has the potential to make our patients more conscious of their environment, leading to an improved mobility.

Thus, the investigators hypothesize that patients who attend live music sessions (compared to controls) will demonstrate an improvement in their mobility measures. This effect could potentially be explained by the rhythmic effect of music and by the fact that live music sessions lead to an improved mood, communication, emotions, and an improved mobility.

  • The primary objective of this study will be to determine if participation to live music sessions will be associated with an improvement in mobility which will be measured using the Times Up and Go (TUG) and gait speed when compared to a control group.
  • The second objective of this study will be to determine if patients participating in live music sessions compared to a control group demonstrate an increase/improvement at the end of their music session in their mood (the Visual Analog Mood Scale (VAMS) will be used), in their positive emotions (the Observed Emotion Rating Scale (OERS) will be used) and communication behaviour (the CODEM instrument will be used).
  • The third objective of this study will be to perform a "feasibility study". By measuring the variation in the different scales which will be used (see the third objective), the investigators will be able to determine how many participants will be necessary for an eventual larger scale study.

This will be a prospective open-label randomized control trial. The patients will be randomly assigned to a musical intervention or to a television intervention (control group). The patients will only attend one session in the context of this research project. Pre and post measures will be done.

Enrollment

36 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients admitted to the Geriatric Assessment Unit of St. Mary's Hospital.
  • Patients interested in participating in this research (recreational) study

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients who are medically unstable to attend the music or television-watching sessions will be excluded from the study.
  • Also, if patients are deemed to be unsafe by the medical team to undergo a TUG or a gait speed assessment, those measures will not be collected. Those patients would therefore only fill a pre- and post VAMS and attend the musical or television session.
  • Finally, the investigators will only consider the first participation to a session in our analysis. In other words, patients who have already participated to a music session prior to the initiation of this study will be excluded (will not be recruited into the study).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

36 participants in 2 patient groups

Music Intervention (Intervention Group)
Experimental group
Description:
The patients will assist to a live music session of 30 minutes which will be given by musicians (volunteers) and will undergo: * mood assessment * emotion assessment * mobility assessment * communication assessment
Treatment:
Other: Music Intervention
Behavioral: Communication Assessment
Behavioral: Mood Assessment
Behavioral: Emotion Assessment
Other: Mobility assessment
Documentary watching (Control Group)
Active Comparator group
Description:
The patients will watch a documentary for 30 minutes in the presence of a volunteer and will undergo: * mood assessment * emotion assessment * mobility assessment * communication assessment
Treatment:
Behavioral: Communication Assessment
Other: Documentary watching
Behavioral: Mood Assessment
Behavioral: Emotion Assessment
Other: Mobility assessment

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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