Impact of ambient bright light on agitation in dementia
β Scribed by Ann Louise Barrick; Philip D. Sloane; Christianna S. Williams; C. Madeline Mitchell; Bettye Rose Connell; Wendy Wood; Susan E. Hickman; John S. Preisser; Sheryl Zimmerman
- Book ID
- 102225991
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 156 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
- DOI
- 10.1002/gps.2453
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
To evaluate the effect of ambient bright light therapy (BLT) on agitation among institutionalized persons with dementia.
Methods
High intensity, low glare ambient lighting was installed in activity and dining areas of a state psychiatric hospital unit in North Carolina and a dementiaβspecific residential care facility in Oregon. The study employed a clusterβunit crossover design involving four ambient lighting conditions: AM bright light, PM bright light, All Day bright light, and Standard light. Sixtyβsix older persons with dementia participated. Outcome measures included direct observation by research personnel and completion by staff caregivers of the 14βitem, short form of the CohenβMansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI).
Results
Analyses of observational data revealed that for participants with mild/moderate dementia, agitation was higher under AM light (pβ=β0.003), PM light (pβ<β0.001), and All Day light (pβ=β0.001) than Standard light. There was also a trend toward severely demented participants being more agitated during AM light than Standard light (pβ=β0.053). Analysis of CMAI data identified differing responses by site: the North Carolina site significantly increased agitation under AM light (pβ=β0.002) and PM light (pβ=β0.013) compared with All Day light while in Oregon, agitation was higher for All Day light compared to AM light (pβ=β0.030). In no comparison was agitation significantly lower under any therapeutic condition, in comparison to Standard lighting.
Conclusions
Ambient bright light is not effective in reducing agitation in dementia and may exacerbate this behavioral symptom. Copyright Β© 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Background. Agitated behaviors are common in dementia patients residing in chronic care settings. Their occurrence may be associated with lack of adequate exposure to sunlight and with circadian rhythm disturbances. Objective. Prior research has suggested that bright light therapy (BLT) may reduce
## Abstract ## Objective A pilot study was performed to examine the efficacy of indoor gardening on sleep, agitation and cognition of dementia patients. ## Method Twentyβthree institutionalized dementia patients who had sleep disturbance and/or agitation participated in a 5βweek study protocol o