Live and recorded music interventions for management of delirium symptoms in acute geriatric patients: Protocol for a randomized feasibility trial

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION
Jelena Golubović, F. Baker, M. Simpson, B. E. Neerland
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction Delirium is an acute alteration in attention, awareness, arousal, and cognition, precipitated by a sudden illness and highly prevalent in older, frail and acutely hospitalized patients. It is associated with poor outcomes, and few effective treatment alternatives. Non-pharmacological interventions and music show promising effects, warranting further research. This pilot randomized repeated measures trial aims to test feasibility of the trial methodology, acceptability, fidelity and safety of the music interventions, suitability of the effect-outcomes. and preliminary effectiveness. Method Acute geriatric patients with delirium or subsyndromal delirium will be randomized to Preferred Recorded Music (n = 30) or Preferred Live Music (n = 30), delivered for 30 minutes, over three consecutive days. Planned feasibility outcomes will comprise recruitment rate, retention and attrition rates, percentage of adherence, deviations rates, and success of treatment fidelity. Clinical outcomes will include: (a) trajectory of delirium symptoms: level of arousal as assessed by Observational Scale of Level of Arousal (OSLA) and modified Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (mRASS);attention, assessed using backwards tests and digit span tests;orientation and short-term memory, assessed using recall tasks and orientation questions from Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale, (b) duration of delirium, (c) length of hospital stay, and (d) use of PRN medication (benzodiazepines and antipsychotics). Discussion The trial will provide results needed to design a subsequent sufficiently powered RCT, informing on the expected recruitment, feasibility and acceptability of the interventions and assessments and preliminary effectiveness (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)
现场和录音音乐干预治疗急性老年患者谵妄症状:随机可行性试验方案
简介谵妄是一种注意力、意识、唤醒和认知的急性变化,由突发疾病引起,在老年、体弱和急性住院患者中非常普遍。它与不良结果有关,而且几乎没有有效的治疗替代方案。非药物干预和音乐显示出有希望的效果,值得进一步研究。这项试点随机重复测量试验旨在测试试验方法的可行性、音乐干预的可接受性、保真度和安全性以及效果结果的适用性。以及初步成效。方法将患有谵妄或亚综合征性谵妄的急性老年患者随机分为首选录音音乐组(n=30)或首选现场音乐组(n=30),连续三天播放30分钟。计划的可行性结果将包括招募率、保留率和流失率、依从性百分比、偏离率和治疗忠诚度的成功率。临床结果将包括:(a)谵妄症状的轨迹:通过觉醒水平观察量表(OSLA)和改良的里士满激动-镇静量表(mRASS)评估的觉醒水平;注意力,使用向后测试和数字跨度测试进行评估;定向和短期记忆,使用记忆性谵妄评估量表中的回忆任务和定向问题进行评估,(b)谵妄的持续时间,(c)住院时间,以及(d)PRN药物(苯二氮卓类药物和抗精神病药物)的使用。讨论该试验将提供设计后续动力充足的随机对照试验所需的结果,告知预期招募、干预措施的可行性和可接受性以及评估和初步有效性(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: Nordic Journal of Music Therapy (NJMT) is published in collaboration with GAMUT - The Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre (Uni Health and University of Bergen), with financial support from Nordic Board for Periodicals in the Humanities and Social Sciences and in co-operation with university programs and organizations of music therapy in the Nordic and Baltic countries. The Nordic Journal of Music Therapy serves the international community of music therapy by being an avenue for publication of scholarly articles, texts on practice, theory and research, dialogues and discussions, reviews and critique. Publication of the journal is based on the collaboration between the music therapy communities in the five Nordic countries of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden and the three Baltic Countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. This international but still regional foundation offers a platform for development of communication with the broader international community of music therapy. Scholars from all over the world are welcomed to write in the journal. Any kind of scholarly articles related to the field of music therapy are welcomed. All articles are reviewed by two referees and by the editors, to ensure the quality of the journal. Since the field of music therapy is still young, we work hard to make the review process a constructive learning experience for the author. The Nordic Journal of Music Therapy does not step aside from active engagement in the development of the discipline, in order to stimulate multicultural, meta-theoretical and philosophical discussions, and new and diverse forms of inquiry. The journal also stimulates reflections on music as the medium that defines the discipline. Perspectives inspired by musicology and ethnomusicology are therefore welcomed.
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