Effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions in activities of daily living performance in people with dementia: A systematic review. Garrido-Pedrosa, J., Sala, I., & Obradors, N. British Journal of Occupational Therapy, 80(7):397–408, 2017.
Effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions in activities of daily living performance in people with dementia: A systematic review [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
IntroductionDementia affects cognitive functions and has a direct impact on the ability to perform activities of daily living. Studies have focused on the impact of cognition-focused interventions on cognitive functions, but less on the daily functionality of people with dementia. The aim of this study was to review systematically evidence of the effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions on the ability of people with dementia to perform activities of daily living.MethodA search of randomised controlled trials was performed in 10 databases to find all available evidence on the subject. Two reviewers independently selected articles based on predetermined inclusion criteria. The articles had to describe randomised controlled trials involving cognition-focused interventions in people with some form of dementia, aged 65 years or over, and specify their score on the Mini-Mental State Examination or the Clinical Dementia Rating. Eleven articles met the inclusion criteria for the review.ResultsCognitive rehabilitation through functional tasks led to maintenance or improvement in everyday tasks in some cases. In cognitive stimulation studies the subjects maintained their performance in activities of daily living with respect to the control condition, but this was not the case in reminiscence stimulation groups. Subjects who underwent cognitive training of cognitive functions did not show significant improvements in activities of daily living.ConclusionThe evidence on the effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions suggests that multi-component programmes that include cognitive rehabilitation or cognitive stimulation could maintain or improve functionality in people with dementia.
@article{garrido-pedrosa_effectiveness_2017,
	title = {Effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions in activities of daily living performance in people with dementia: {A} systematic review},
	volume = {80},
	issn = {0308-0226},
	shorttitle = {Effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions in activities of daily living performance in people with dementia},
	url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308022617698166},
	doi = {10.1177/0308022617698166},
	abstract = {IntroductionDementia affects cognitive functions and has a direct impact on the ability to perform activities of daily living. Studies have focused on the impact of cognition-focused interventions on cognitive functions, but less on the daily functionality of people with dementia. The aim of this study was to review systematically evidence of the effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions on the ability of people with dementia to perform activities of daily living.MethodA search of randomised controlled trials was performed in 10 databases to find all available evidence on the subject. Two reviewers independently selected articles based on predetermined inclusion criteria. The articles had to describe randomised controlled trials involving cognition-focused interventions in people with some form of dementia, aged 65 years or over, and specify their score on the Mini-Mental State Examination or the Clinical Dementia Rating. Eleven articles met the inclusion criteria for the review.ResultsCognitive rehabilitation through functional tasks led to maintenance or improvement in everyday tasks in some cases. In cognitive stimulation studies the subjects maintained their performance in activities of daily living with respect to the control condition, but this was not the case in reminiscence stimulation groups. Subjects who underwent cognitive training of cognitive functions did not show significant improvements in activities of daily living.ConclusionThe evidence on the effectiveness of cognition-focused interventions suggests that multi-component programmes that include cognitive rehabilitation or cognitive stimulation could maintain or improve functionality in people with dementia.},
	language = {en},
	number = {7},
	urldate = {2017-06-13},
	journal = {British Journal of Occupational Therapy},
	author = {Garrido-Pedrosa, Jèssica and Sala, Isabel and Obradors, Núria},
	year = {2017},
	keywords = {Article, EUIT},
	pages = {397--408},
}

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