Structured relearning of activities of daily living in dementia: the randomized controlled REDALI-DEM trial on errorless learning

Errorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes during the learning process. The majority of previous studies on EL taught patients with dementia artificial tasks of little or no relevance for their dai...

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Published in:Alzheimer's research & therapy Vol. 9; no. 1; p. 22
Main Authors: Voigt-Radloff, Sebastian, de Werd, Maartje M E, Leonhart, Rainer, Boelen, Danielle H E, Olde Rikkert, Marcel G M, Fliessbach, Klaus, Klöppel, Stefan, Heimbach, Bernhard, Fellgiebel, Andreas, Dodel, Richard, Eschweiler, Gerhard W, Hausner, Lucrezia, Kessels, Roy P C, Hüll, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England BioMed Central 23-03-2017
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Abstract Errorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes during the learning process. The majority of previous studies on EL taught patients with dementia artificial tasks of little or no relevance for their daily lives. Furthermore, only a few controlled studies on EL have so far been performed and just a handful of studies have examined the long-term effects of EL. Tasks were not always trained in the patients' natural or home environment, limiting the external validity of these studies. This multicenter parallel randomized controlled trial examines the effects of EL compared with trial and error learning (TEL) on the performance of activities of daily living in persons with Alzheimer's or mixed-type dementia living at home. Patients received nine 1-hour task training sessions over eight weeks using EL or TEL. Task performance was measured using video observations at week 16. Secondary outcome measures were task performance measured at week 26, satisfaction with treatment, need for assistance, challenging behavior, adverse events, resource utilization and treatment costs. A total of 161 participants were randomized, of whom 71 completed the EL and 74 the TEL arm at week 11. Sixty-nine EL patients and 71 TEL patients were assessed at the 16-week follow-up (the primary measurement endpoint). Intention-to-treat analysis showed a significantly improved task performance in both groups. No significant differences between the treatment groups were found for primary or secondary outcomes. Structured relearning improved the performance of activities of daily living. Improvements were maintained for 6 months. EL had no additional effect over TEL. German Register of Clinical Trials DRKS00003117 . Registered 31 May 2011.
AbstractList Background Errorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes during the learning process. The majority of previous studies on EL taught patients with dementia artificial tasks of little or no relevance for their daily lives. Furthermore, only a few controlled studies on EL have so far been performed and just a handful of studies have examined the long-term effects of EL. Tasks were not always trained in the patients’ natural or home environment, limiting the external validity of these studies. This multicenter parallel randomized controlled trial examines the effects of EL compared with trial and error learning (TEL) on the performance of activities of daily living in persons with Alzheimer’s or mixed-type dementia living at home. Methods Patients received nine 1-hour task training sessions over eight weeks using EL or TEL. Task performance was measured using video observations at week 16. Secondary outcome measures were task performance measured at week 26, satisfaction with treatment, need for assistance, challenging behavior, adverse events, resource utilization and treatment costs. Results A total of 161 participants were randomized, of whom 71 completed the EL and 74 the TEL arm at week 11. Sixty-nine EL patients and 71 TEL patients were assessed at the 16-week follow-up (the primary measurement endpoint). Intention-to-treat analysis showed a significantly improved task performance in both groups. No significant differences between the treatment groups were found for primary or secondary outcomes. Conclusions Structured relearning improved the performance of activities of daily living. Improvements were maintained for 6 months. EL had no additional effect over TEL.
Errorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes during the learning process. The majority of previous studies on EL taught patients with dementia artificial tasks of little or no relevance for their daily lives. Furthermore, only a few controlled studies on EL have so far been performed and just a handful of studies have examined the long-term effects of EL. Tasks were not always trained in the patients' natural or home environment, limiting the external validity of these studies. This multicenter parallel randomized controlled trial examines the effects of EL compared with trial and error learning (TEL) on the performance of activities of daily living in persons with Alzheimer's or mixed-type dementia living at home. Patients received nine 1-hour task training sessions over eight weeks using EL or TEL. Task performance was measured using video observations at week 16. Secondary outcome measures were task performance measured at week 26, satisfaction with treatment, need for assistance, challenging behavior, adverse events, resource utilization and treatment costs. A total of 161 participants were randomized, of whom 71 completed the EL and 74 the TEL arm at week 11. Sixty-nine EL patients and 71 TEL patients were assessed at the 16-week follow-up (the primary measurement endpoint). Intention-to-treat analysis showed a significantly improved task performance in both groups. No significant differences between the treatment groups were found for primary or secondary outcomes. Structured relearning improved the performance of activities of daily living. Improvements were maintained for 6 months. EL had no additional effect over TEL. German Register of Clinical Trials DRKS00003117 . Registered 31 May 2011.
BACKGROUNDErrorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes during the learning process. The majority of previous studies on EL taught patients with dementia artificial tasks of little or no relevance for their daily lives. Furthermore, only a few controlled studies on EL have so far been performed and just a handful of studies have examined the long-term effects of EL. Tasks were not always trained in the patients' natural or home environment, limiting the external validity of these studies. This multicenter parallel randomized controlled trial examines the effects of EL compared with trial and error learning (TEL) on the performance of activities of daily living in persons with Alzheimer's or mixed-type dementia living at home.METHODSPatients received nine 1-hour task training sessions over eight weeks using EL or TEL. Task performance was measured using video observations at week 16. Secondary outcome measures were task performance measured at week 26, satisfaction with treatment, need for assistance, challenging behavior, adverse events, resource utilization and treatment costs.RESULTSA total of 161 participants were randomized, of whom 71 completed the EL and 74 the TEL arm at week 11. Sixty-nine EL patients and 71 TEL patients were assessed at the 16-week follow-up (the primary measurement endpoint). Intention-to-treat analysis showed a significantly improved task performance in both groups. No significant differences between the treatment groups were found for primary or secondary outcomes.CONCLUSIONSStructured relearning improved the performance of activities of daily living. Improvements were maintained for 6 months. EL had no additional effect over TEL.TRIAL REGISTRATIONGerman Register of Clinical Trials DRKS00003117 . Registered 31 May 2011.
ArticleNumber 22
Author de Werd, Maartje M E
Boelen, Danielle H E
Fellgiebel, Andreas
Hausner, Lucrezia
Kessels, Roy P C
Heimbach, Bernhard
Dodel, Richard
Klöppel, Stefan
Fliessbach, Klaus
Hüll, Michael
Leonhart, Rainer
Olde Rikkert, Marcel G M
Eschweiler, Gerhard W
Voigt-Radloff, Sebastian
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  fullname: Heimbach, Bernhard
  organization: Center for Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology, University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
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  givenname: Andreas
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  organization: Department of Geriatrics, University Clinic Essen, Essen, Germany
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  surname: Eschweiler
  fullname: Eschweiler, Gerhard W
  organization: Geriatric Center, University Hospital Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
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  givenname: Lucrezia
  surname: Hausner
  fullname: Hausner, Lucrezia
  organization: Department of Gerontopsychiatry, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany
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  givenname: Roy P C
  orcidid: 0000-0001-9500-9793
  surname: Kessels
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  organization: Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. Roy.Kessels@radboudumc.nl
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  givenname: Michael
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  fullname: Hüll, Michael
  organization: Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medical Centre Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
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Issue 1
Keywords Cognitive rehabilitation
Activities of daily living
Randomized controlled trial
Errorless learning
Alzheimer’s dementia
Dementia
Language English
License Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
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  publication-title: J Clin Exp Neuropsychol
  doi: 10.1076/jcen.25.6.805.16474
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Snippet Errorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes during the...
Background Errorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes...
BACKGROUNDErrorless learning (EL) is a method for optimizing learning, which uses feed-forward instructions in order to prevent people from making mistakes...
SourceID pubmedcentral
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SourceType Open Access Repository
Aggregation Database
Index Database
StartPage 22
SubjectTerms Activities of Daily Living
Aged
Alzheimer's disease
Biofeedback, Psychology - methods
Caregivers
Clinical trials
Dementia
Dementia - diagnosis
Dementia - rehabilitation
Evidence-based medicine
Female
Geriatrics
Humans
Learning
Male
Memory
Mental depression
Netherlands
Neurological Rehabilitation - methods
Psychomotor Performance
Single-Blind Method
Teaching methods
Treatment Outcome
Validity
Title Structured relearning of activities of daily living in dementia: the randomized controlled REDALI-DEM trial on errorless learning
URI https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28335810
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1884260807
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1881265231
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PMC5364615
Volume 9
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