Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMeasuring and monitoring behaviour is difficult in people living with later stage Alzheimer’s disease and specific behavioural symptoms such as agitation and aggression (AA). Currently, subjective information given by these patients is highly susceptible to inaccurate recall, clinicians rely on answers provided by care givers, which can be biased and lack fine‐grain temporal detail. Although actigraphy watches have been useful tools for research, little is known about the feasibility of their use in agitated dementia participants and on the factors influencing watch compliance.MethodPeople diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and significant AA symptoms living in care homes were asked to wear an actigraphy watch (GENEactiv Original) for 4 consecutive weeks. Demographic data, Functional Assessment Staging Tool (FAST) score, behavioural symptom pattern and severity were recorded using the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Nursing Home Version (NPI‐NH). Watch‐recorded wearing time and activity data were used to evaluate adherence. Care home staff were interviewed to explore factors influencing watch wearing by participants and to develop solutions to improve compliance.ResultWe recruited 28 participants (14 female) and found wearing the watch feasible overall. No statistical compliance difference was found between different groups based on age, FAST score, agitation pattern or severity; however, a significant gender difference was found with male participants being more adherent (Table). Participants were more compliant in weeks 3‐4, and first week adherence predicted overall adherence (Figure). Factors influencing compliance include the design and appearance of the watch, previous watch wearing habit, and the perceived purpose of the study. Using documents easily readable to participants and care givers to facilitate understanding of the study and to communicate challenging clinical scenarios appeared to enhance adherence.ConclusionWearing an actigraphy watch for behavioural monitoring was feasible for moderate to severe Alzheimer’s disease patients with AA symptoms in care home settings. Gender‐specific design and appearance should be considered when selecting the actigraphy watch. For dementia studies planning to use an actigraphy watch, compliance can be improved by incorporating a short lead‐in phase to establish a watch wearing routine and by providing reader‐friendly documents about the watch purpose to communicate with participants and care givers.

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