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Online Caregiver Psychoeducation and Support for Alzheimer's

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) logo

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3
Phase 2

Conditions

Alzheimer's Disease

Treatments

Behavioral: caregiver website support
Behavioral: caregiver brief supportive phone calls

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT00416078
IIR 05-107

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is piloting an internet-based intervention to provide support for caregivers of VA patients with Alzheimer's disease or related memory difficulties (ADRD). Veterans with a clinical diagnosis of ADRD and their caregiver/relatives will be randomized to receive one of two interventions: (1) customary care (cc) and access to an intensive, interactive online education and support website intervention for 6 months, or (2) cc and monthly brief telephone calls with project staff for six month. It is hypothesized that participation in the intensive intervention will result in a reductions in patient problematic behavior and caregiver responses to it, reduced caregiver burden and depression, and improved medication adherence at the end of treatment, and more patients remaining at home through the 12 months post-randomization period..

Full description

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive brain disease resulting in cognitive and functional decline. While some pharmacological agents and behavioral programs are now available to slow the rate of decline, there is no cure. Caregivers, who typically are the female spouses or daughters of afflicted individuals, must confront both the deterioration of a loved one, and that person's need for increasingly demanding care. Caregivers tend to experience high levels of depression, anxiety, and burden. Data suggest that providing education, social support, and ongoing professional consultation to families involved in the care of a relative with AD results in improvement in caregiver psychological status, and sometimes even slows the functional decline of the patient.

Recent technological advancements in video conferencing, online communication, and streaming audio/video presentations, which are increasingly easy to use and gaining widespread acceptance among mental health professionals as well as the public, have given rise to a great deal of interest in telemedicine and telepsychiatry. This study tested an Internet-based family intervention for AD that relatives can access from their homes with ease, and at no cost. In addition to improving patient outcomes through instruction of effective behavioral management, we proposed that participation in an Internet program would also reduce caregiver depression and burden. Fifty-three veterans with a clinical diagnosis of AD and their caregiver/relatives were randomized to receive one of two interventions: (1) customary care (cc) and access to an intensive, interactive online education and support website intervention for 6 months, or (2) cc and monthly brief telephone calls with project staff for 6 months. We hypothesized that, at the end of the active intervention, participation in the intensive intervention would result reduced patient problematic behavior, caregiver burden, depression, and negative responses to problematic patient behaviors, as well as improved patient medication compliance. At 12 month follow-up, we hypothesized access to the online program would result in more patients remaining at home. The overriding longterm project objective was to develop an effective online education and support program for caregivers of patients with AD that can be manualized, replicated, and disseminated to other clinical and research centers, within both the VA health care system and the community, to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of psychosocial treatment in AD.

Enrollment

53 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 95 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient living in community and ambulatory
  • Patient has diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease
  • Patient age 50-95
  • Caregiver age 18-90
  • Patient currently under treatment for Alzheimer's disease
  • Patient and caregiver reside within 2 hours of Los Angeles
  • Caregiver has home internet access
  • Patient has close contact with caregiver

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient lives in residential setting
  • No family contact
  • Acute illness or chronic disease in patient or caregiver
  • Patient or caregiver plans to leave area within the year

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

53 participants in 2 patient groups

caregiver website support
Experimental group
Description:
caregiver access to website support for 6 months embedded in one year of customary care
Treatment:
Behavioral: caregiver website support
caregiver brief supportive phone calls
Active Comparator group
Description:
caregiver brief supportive telephone calls for 6 months embedded in one year of customary care
Treatment:
Behavioral: caregiver brief supportive phone calls

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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