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The purpose of this study is to refine, implement and assess the acceptability and feasibility of an existing nutrition intervention applied to people living with dementia receiving home care.
Full description
In the United Kingdom, two-thirds of people with dementia live at home and rely on family and friends to support with eating and drinking. Making sure people eat and drink well when they have dementia can be difficult as dementia progresses. Many with dementia are therefore at risk of being undernourished. This can be caused by poor appetite as well as eating and swallowing problems. Being undernourished can lead to poorer health and quality of life for people with dementia (and their carers), increased hospital admissions and health care use costing around £23.5 billion in terms of health and social care expenditure.
Home care workers provide care for people with dementia more frequently and for longer than healthcare professionals. Existing research and our engagement work indicate home care workers are well positioned to assess nutritional status and intervene early, but currently lack training, access to resources and support from NHS services. A more pro-active and wide-ranging approach to nutritional assessment and management is needed targeting interventions at home care workers and family carer dyads, with input from appropriate healthcare professionals.
As a collaborative project, the TOMATO study aims to work together with home care workers, people with dementia, and family carers to adapt a nutrition intervention (initially developed for care home) to support people living with dementia at home with eating and drinking. The intervention includes training programme, toolkit with video, workbook and guides for staff and family carers, and resources and leaflets.
This study will take place in Dorset, Midlands and West Yorkshire in two phases.
Phase 1: The first phase involves adapting the existing nutrition intervention by getting feedback from people with dementia, family carers, home care staff and nutrition experts through semi-structured interviews.
Phase 2: The second phase involves training home care workers to deliver the adapted approach to people with dementia and family carers (up to 32 participant dyads) in receipt of care at home. Information about food intake, weight, practicality, and costs of the approach will be gathered. Semi-structured interviews will also be conducted with participants living with dementia, their family carers, and home care managers to get their feedback on the approach.
If feasible and acceptable (based on progression criteria), findings will inform the design of future trial (effectiveness/implementation research).
The TOMATO patient and public involvement group which consist of family carers, people with dementia and home care workers will provide input throughout the study duration (including project design, delivery, analysis, reporting and dissemination of the findings).
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Participants: People with dementia, their relatives, and home care workers
Inclusion Criteria:
People with Dementia
formal diagnosis or functional symptoms associated with probable dementia (assessed by a senior home care worker using the FAST).
have family member/friend providing care/support and resident in the same house as the person with dementia or living close by.
be currently or have recently (in last 6-months) been at risk of/experienced malnutrition in receipt of home care services.
be able to communicate fluently enough in English or provide informed consent with the assistance of a translator or family member to participate.
be able to recall their experiences of malnutrition and carer/home care worker responses well enough to discuss.
Carers and Home Care Workers
Exclusion Criteria:
People with Dementia
Carers and Home Care Workers
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
162 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Suzy Wignall; Gladys Yinusa, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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