Abstract

Background: The optimum approach to enhance the understanding toward dementia is to experience how patients feel as they experience the manifestations of the disease. The application of virtual reality (VR) and relevant innovative technologies for developing caregiver training programs allows caregivers to better understand dementia and empathize with patients. Objectives: To develop a VR-based experiential training course on individualized care for the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD). Methods: The participants were caregivers of patients with dementia. They assessed the usability of the VR product after the intervention and the VR experience as a preliminary measure of the effectiveness of the intervention using a usability scale and a self-reported appraisal scale, respectively. Results and Conclusion: Ten in-service and in-home caregivers completed the VR training course. The course yielded a usability score of 74.06 points, indicating excellent usability. The content validity index (CVI) of the self-reported VR experience appraisal scale ranged from 0.8–1, scale-level CVI was 0.81, and reliability (Cronbach’s α) was 0.929. The mean score of the overall scale was 4.67 ± 0.33. These findings suggest that the VR-based experiential training course enabled the home caregivers to deepen their understanding of the BPSD shown by community-dwelling patients and, therefore, to provide better care services. The course developed in this study is the first VR course directed toward dementia care in Taiwan. Given its excellent usability, as well as the effectiveness of the VR experience appraisal scale for deepening the caregivers’ skills in managing patients’ BPSD symptoms, the course can be promoted and applied in caregiver training programs for dementia in the future.

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