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Center for Excellence in Assisted Living

Center for Excellence in Assisted Living CEAL@UNC

Advancing the well-being of the people who live and work in assisted living through research, practice, and policy.

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The Relationship between Perceived Engagement in Meaningful Activity and Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia among Assisted Living Residents

Date: November 2024Topics: Cognitive/Dementia, SocialType: Academic PublicationPublication: Geriatric Nursing (New York)Authors: Klinedinst, N. J., Holmes, S., Resnick, B., & Galik, E.
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The purpose of this study is to assess the relationship between engagement in meaningful activities and behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), including agitation, apathy, irritability, and depression among 71 assisted living (AL) residents with moderate to severe dementia. This secondary analysis used baseline data from a randomized controlled trial, Meaningful Activity for Managing Behavioral Symptoms of Distress (MAC-4-BSD) in five AL communities. The Engagement in Meaningful Activities Scale and the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire were completed. Logistic regression was used to compare those with and without each BPSD symptom of interest on engagement in meaningful activities while controlling for age, sex, and cognitive impairment. On average, participants were 85 years old, white, females. Perceived engagement in meaningful activities was significantly associated with decreased odds of having agitation (OR=0.94, 95 % CI [.88–0.99]) but not with apathy, depression, or irritability. Engagement in meaningful activities may help reduce agitation among AL residents.

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