One-Year Change in Locus of Control among People with Dementia.

IF 1.4 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders Extra Pub Date : 2021-12-07 eCollection Date: 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1159/000520248
Ingeborg Halse, Guro Hanevold Bjørkløf, Knut Engedal, Geir Selbæk, Maria Lage Barca
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Knowledge of how perceptions of personal control change over time may provide valuable insights into how people cope with having dementia. The present study aimed to examine change in locus of control over a 12-month period in persons with dementia.

Method: The study included 52 participants with dementia. Locus of control was measured with the Locus of Control of Behavior Scale (LoCB), with higher scores indicating a more external locus of control, interpreted as perceiving less personal control. A ≥5% change on the LoCB was considered clinically meaningful. We recorded sociodemographic characteristics and assessed dementia severity, cognition, ability to function independently in daily activities and physical self-maintenance, depressive symptomatology, and number of prescribed medications. Analyses were performed to examine differences between those with increases (more external) or decreases (less external) in the LoCB score after 12 months and to examine associations between baseline variables and change in the LoCB score.

Results: The mean LoCB score for the total sample did not change after 12 months (baseline mean 29.33 vs. follow-up mean 30.33, p = 0.553); however, 2 subgroups emerged. Using the ≥5% cutoff revealed that the LoCB score changed for 92.3% of the sample, becoming less external (lower LoCB) for 21 participants and more external (higher LoCB) for 27 participants. At baseline, the mean LoBC score was higher in the group that became less external (33.81 vs. 24.56), p = 0.006, while this was reverse at follow-up (23.57 vs. 34.41), p = 0.001. Dementia severity and dependence in physical self-maintenance increased during the 12 months in both groups. Among those becoming more external, we also found a decline in cognition (p = 0.002), an increase in dependence in daily activities (p = 0.003), an increase in the use of prescribed medication, and a decrease in depressive symptomatology (p = 0.003). The baseline LoCB score was the only variable associated with 12-month change in LoCB scores (p = 0.001).

Conclusion: Most participants showed a clinically meaningful change in locus of control after 12 months. Those with more signs of dementia progression reported a decrease in personal control but also a decrease in depressive symptoms. These findings are interesting for our understanding of coping but must be replicated with a larger sample.

Abstract Image

痴呆症患者控制感的一年变化。
简介了解个人控制感是如何随着时间的推移而变化的,可以为了解痴呆症患者如何应对痴呆症提供有价值的见解。本研究旨在探讨痴呆症患者的控制感在 12 个月内的变化情况:研究包括 52 名痴呆症患者。控制感是通过行为控制感量表(LoCB)来测量的,得分越高表示外部控制感越强,也就是个人控制感越弱。LoCB上≥5%的变化被认为具有临床意义。我们记录了社会人口学特征,并评估了痴呆症的严重程度、认知能力、独立完成日常活动和身体自我维护的能力、抑郁症状以及处方药的数量。研究分析了12个月后LoCB得分增加(外部因素较多)或减少(外部因素较少)的患者之间的差异,并研究了基线变量与LoCB得分变化之间的关联:总样本的 LoCB 平均分在 12 个月后没有变化(基线平均分 29.33 vs. 随访平均分 30.33,p = 0.553);但出现了两个亚组。使用≥5% 的分界线显示,92.3% 的样本的 LoCB 分数发生了变化,21 名参与者的 LoCB 分数变低,27 名参与者的 LoCB 分数变高。基线时,外在性降低组的平均 LoCB 得分更高(33.81 对 24.56),p = 0.006,而随访时情况相反(23.57 对 34.41),p = 0.001。在这 12 个月中,两组患者的痴呆严重程度和对身体自我维护的依赖程度都有所上升。我们还发现,在变得更加外向的人群中,认知能力下降(p = 0.002),对日常活动的依赖性增加(p = 0.003),处方药使用增加,抑郁症状减轻(p = 0.003)。基线 LoCB 分数是与 12 个月 LoCB 分数变化相关的唯一变量(p = 0.001):结论:12 个月后,大多数参与者的控制感都出现了有临床意义的变化。结论:12 个月后,大多数参与者的控制感都出现了有临床意义的变化,痴呆症进展迹象较多的参与者的个人控制感有所下降,但抑郁症状也有所减轻。这些发现对我们了解应对方法很有意义,但必须在更大样本中进行重复。
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来源期刊
Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders Extra
Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders Extra Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: This open access and online-only journal publishes original articles covering the entire spectrum of cognitive dysfunction such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s chorea and other neurodegenerative diseases. The journal draws from diverse related research disciplines such as psychogeriatrics, neuropsychology, clinical neurology, morphology, physiology, genetic molecular biology, pathology, biochemistry, immunology, pharmacology and pharmaceutics. Strong emphasis is placed on the publication of research findings from animal studies which are complemented by clinical and therapeutic experience to give an overall appreciation of the field. Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders Extra provides additional contents based on reviewed and accepted submissions to the main journal Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders Extra .
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