This site uses cookies to measure how you use the website so it can be updated and improved based on your needs and also uses cookies to help remember the notifications you’ve seen, like this one, so that we don’t show them to you again. If you could also tell us a little bit about yourself, this information will help us understand how we can support you better and make this site even easier for you to use and navigate.

Individual music therapy for agitation in dementia: an exploratory randomized controlled trial

Authors

Ridder, Hanne Mette O., Stige, Brynjulf, Qvale, Liv Gunnhild, Gold, Christian

Journal

Aging & Mental Health, Volume: 17, No.: 6, Pages.: 667-678

Year of Publication

2013

Abstract

Objectives: Agitation in nursing home residents with dementia leads to increase in psychotropic medication, decrease in quality of life, and to patient distress and caregiver burden. Music therapy has previously been found effective in treatment of agitation in dementia care but studies have been methodologically insufficient. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of individual music therapy on agitation in persons with moderate/severe dementia living in nursing homes, and to explore its effect on psychotropic medication and quality of life.; Method: In a crossover trial, 42 participants with dementia were randomized to a sequence of six weeks of individual music therapy and six weeks of standard care. Outcome measures included agitation, quality of life and medication.; Results: Agitation disruptiveness increased during standard care and decreased during music therapy. The difference at -6.77 (95% CI (confidence interval): -12.71, -0.83) was significant (p = 0.027), with a medium effect size (0.50). The prescription of psychotropic medication increased significantly more often during standard care than during music therapy (p = 0.02).; Conclusion: This study shows that six weeks of music therapy reduces agitation disruptiveness and prevents medication increases in people with dementia. The positive trends in relation to agitation frequency and quality of life call for further research with a larger sample.;

Bibtex Citation

@article{Ridder_2013, doi = {10.1080/13607863.2013.790926}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13607863.2013.790926}, year = 2013, month = {apr}, publisher = {Informa {UK} Limited}, volume = {17}, number = {6}, pages = {667--678}, author = {Hanne Mette O. Ridder and Brynjulf Stige and Liv Gunnhild Qvale and Christian Gold}, title = {Individual music therapy for agitation in dementia: an exploratory randomized controlled trial}, journal = {Aging {&} Mental Health} }

Keywords

administration & dosage, aged, aged, 80 and over, dementia, drug therapy, female, humans, male, methods, music therapy, nursing homes, psychiatric status rating scales, psychology, psychomotor agitation, psychotropic drugs, quality of life, therapy, treatment outcome

Countries of Study

Denmark

Types of Dementia

Dementia (general / unspecified)

Types of Study

Economic evaluation, Randomised Controlled Trial

Type of Outcomes

Behaviour

Settings

Nursing Homes

Type of Interventions

Non-pharmacological Treatment

Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions

Arts and Music Interventions (including Art and Music Therapy)