Annals of Medicine (Dec 2023)

A digital health home intervention for people within the Alzheimer’s disease continuum: results from the Ability-TelerehABILITation pilot randomized controlled trial

  • Federica Rossetto,
  • Sara Isernia,
  • Olivia  Realdon,
  • Francesca Borgnis,
  • Valeria Blasi,
  • Chiara Pagliari,
  • Monia Cabinio,
  • Margherita Alberoni,
  • Fabrizia Mantovani,
  • Mario Clerici,
  • Francesca Baglio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2023.2185672
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 55, no. 1
pp. 1080 – 1091

Abstract

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AbstractPurpose This study tested the efficacy of digital-health home intervention for people within the Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-continuum.Methods Thirty people within the AD continuum were randomly assigned to a telerehabilitation (ABILITY; 6 males, Mage=78.2 ± 3.95) or treatment as usual (TAU; 8 males, Mage=77.13 ± 6.38), performing cognitive and physical activities at home for six weeks. The ABILITY intervention additionally included a digital platform enabling communication between the hospital and the patient’s home. Efficiency, such as adherence, perceived fit of demands and skills, usability, and effectiveness measures, including neuropsychological level, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and autonomy in daily living, were collected before (T0), after the treatment (T1), and at the 1-year-follow-up (T2).Results The ABILITY program was efficient, with a higher adherence (81% vs. 62%), a higher perceived fit of demands and skills than TAU (p TAU) emerged on the global cognitive level, especially in language, executive functions, and memory domains. Moreover, a treatment carry-over effect (1-year follow-up) was observed in global cognitive functions (especially language) (ABILITY > TAU), behavioral symptoms, and caregiver distress (TAU > ABILITY).Conclusions Our preliminary findings suggest that ABILITY is a promising eHealth intervention to improve at-home treatment adherence and to preserve cognitive and behavioral abilities.

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