AbstractBackgroundPeople with dementia (PwD) require high levels of care, most of which is provided by either family or informal caregivers. Psychosocial interventions have been demonstrated to reduce caregiver burden and delay nursing home admission. Telemedicine could provide caregivers access to such interventions, increasing their sense of competence and resilience.MethodThrough a co‐design process involving geriatricians, psychologists, neurologists, nurses, occupational therapists and 25 dyads, a telerehabilitation program has been developed and tested through a 12‐months Beta Test protocol. The program comprises a multidimensional clinical assessment and a telerehabilitation plan. Whilst occupational therapists act as care manager interface towards caregivers through a telemedicine platform, a multidisciplinary team including nurses, psychologists and geriatricians, regularly oversees each plan and delivers interventions whenever required.ResultsAlmost all caregivers were spouses or children (22 out of 25). 79% were female and 59% lived with the care recipient in the same household. The average age of caregivers was 63,72 and Zarit index 36,88. On average PwD’s age was 83,75, Barthel Index 61,27, IADL 0,97, NPI Index 24,86 with 4,8 BPSD. The program has required on average 18,8 sessions per caregiver: which comprised of 4,5 sessions for multidimensional evaluation of both PwD and caregiver, 9,1 sessions for the execution of the telerehabilitation plan and 5,2 sessions for follow up. Sessions could range from 45 minutes (clinical scales‐based assessment) to 10 minutes (follow up). 48% of telerehabilitation sessions addressed BPSD, 17% provided emotional support, 14% supported caregivers in ADL activities, 11% addressed comorbidities and 10% addressed other issues (communication and cognition). A self‐developed caregivers' reported outcome questionnaire (24 responders out of 25) reported that 88% of caregivers improved their health literacy, 87% their sense of competence and 97% felt emotionally supported. After at least 6 months, a follow up analysis on 13 PwD and 10 family caregivers, NPI Index has improved on average by 41% while Zarit Index by 16%. Average yearly cost of the program reached 2 euro per day per dyad.ConclusionsThe beta test showed encouraging outcomes in terms of caregivers’ satisfaction that require further investigation in terms of clinical outcomes and cost‐effectiveness.