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Efficacy of Music Therapy and Digital Music Rehabilitation in Dementia
Sponsor: University of Helsinki
Summary
This study evaluates the applicability and clinical efficacy of conventional music therapy and digital music rehabilitation for dementia in home and care home settings.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
60 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
192
Start Date
2022-09-01
Completion Date
2025-12-31
Last Updated
2025-02-06
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Conventional music therapy (CMT)
CMT comprises both receptive and expressive musical activities (listening and reminiscing to music, singing, and moving to music) held in small groups (8 PWDs/group) for a duration of 10 weeks (2x60 min sessions/week) and led by a professional music therapist. For PWDs living in a care home, the CMT sessions are implemented as inpatient rehabilitation held at the care home. For PWDs living at home, the CMT sessions are implemented as outpatient rehabilitation held at a local day activity centre.
Digital music rehabilitation (DMR)
DMR comprises both receptive and expressive musical activities (listening and reminiscing to music, singing, and moving to music) held in small groups (8 PWDs/group) for a duration of 10 weeks (2x60 min sessions/week) and implemented using a novel digital music content service called HILDA. In HILDA, there are a number of stand-alone musical programs hosted by a virtual presenter which the PWDs can follow and through which they can interact. The DMR sessions are moderated by an instructor (care home staff member or research assistant). For PWDs living in a care home, the DMR is implemented as live sessions held at the care home using a HILDA box connected to a TV screen and operated via a remote controller by the instructor. For PWDs living at home, the DMR is implemented as virtual sessions using a video communication platform that allows the instructor to stream and control the HILDA service and the participants to see and hear each other and interact.
Locations (1)
University of Helsinki / Faculty of Medicine / Department of Psychology
Helsinki, Finland