Evaluating the Impact of a Daylight-Simulating Luminaire on Mood, Agitation, Rest-Activity Patterns, and Social Well-Being Parameters in a Care Home for People With Dementia: Cohort Study.

IF 5.4 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR mHealth and uHealth Pub Date : 2024-11-29 DOI:10.2196/56951
Kate Turley, Joseph Rafferty, Raymond Bond, Maurice Mulvenna, Assumpta Ryan, Lloyd Crawford
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Abstract

Background: Living with a diagnosis of dementia can involve managing certain behavioral and psychological symptoms. Alongside cognitive decline, this cohort expresses a suppression in melatonin production which can negatively influence their alignment of sleep or wake timings with the 24 hour day and night cycle. As a result, their circadian rhythms become disrupted. Since daylight has the capacity to stimulate the circadian rhythm and humans spend approximately 90% of their time indoors, research has shifted toward the use of indoor lighting to achieve this same effect. This type of lighting is programmed in a daylight-simulating manner; mimicking the spectral changes of the sun throughout the day. As such, this paper focuses on the use of a dynamic lighting and sensing technology used to support the circadian rhythm, behavioral and psychological symptoms, and well-being of people living with dementia.

Objective: This study aimed to understand how dynamic lighting, as opposed to static lighting, may impact the well-being of those who are living with dementia.

Methods: An ethically approved trial was conducted within a care home for people with dementia. Data were collected in both quantitative and qualitative formats using environmentally deployed radar sensing technology and the validated QUALIDEM (Quality of Life for People With Dementia) well-being scale, respectively. An initial 4 weeks of static baseline lighting was used before switching out for 12 weeks of dynamic lighting. Metrics were collected for 11 participants on mood, social interactions, agitation, sense of feeling, and sleep and rest-activity over a period of 16 weeks.

Results: Dynamic lighting showed significant improvement with a moderate effect size in well-being parameters including positive affect (P=.03), social isolation (P=.048), and feeling at home (P=.047) after 5-10 weeks of dynamic lighting exposure. The results also highlight statistically significant improvements in rest-activity-related parameters of interdaily stability (P<.001), intradaily variation (P<.001), and relative amplitude (P=.03) from baseline to weeks 5-10, with the effect propagating for interdaily stability at weeks 10-16 as well (P<.001). Nonsignificant improvements are also noted for sleep metrics with a small effect size; however, the affect in agitation does not reflect this improvement.

Conclusions: Dynamic lighting has the potential to support well-being in dementia, with seemingly stronger influence in earlier weeks where the dynamic lighting initially follows the static lighting contrast, before proceeding to aggregate as marginal gains over time. Future longitudinal studies are recommended to assess the additional impact that varying daylight availability throughout the year may have on the measured parameters.

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评估模拟日光灯具对养老院中痴呆症患者的情绪、躁动、休息-活动模式和社会福利参数的影响:队列研究
背景:诊断为痴呆症的患者可能需要管理某些行为和心理症状。在认知能力下降的同时,该队列还表现出褪黑激素分泌的抑制,这可能会对他们的睡眠或醒来时间与24小时昼夜循环的一致性产生负面影响。结果,他们的昼夜节律被打乱了。由于日光具有刺激昼夜节律的能力,而人类大约90%的时间都在室内度过,因此研究已经转向使用室内照明来达到同样的效果。这种类型的照明以模拟日光的方式进行编程;模拟太阳全天的光谱变化。因此,本文侧重于使用动态照明和传感技术来支持痴呆症患者的昼夜节律、行为和心理症状以及福祉。目的:本研究旨在了解动态照明,而不是静态照明,如何影响痴呆症患者的健康。方法:一项经伦理批准的试验在一家老年痴呆症患者护理中心进行。数据分别采用环境部署雷达传感技术和经过验证的QUALIDEM(痴呆症患者生活质量)健康量表,以定量和定性两种格式收集。最初4周使用静态基线照明,然后切换到12周的动态照明。在16周的时间里,研究人员收集了11名参与者的情绪、社交互动、躁动、感觉、睡眠和休息活动等指标。结果:在5-10周的动态照明后,动态照明在积极情绪(P=.03)、社会隔离(P=.048)和家的感觉(P=.047)等幸福感参数上有显著改善。研究结果还强调了在休息-活动相关的日常稳定性参数方面的统计学显著改善(pp结论:动态照明有可能支持痴呆症患者的健康,在最初的几周内,动态照明的影响似乎更大,在此之前,动态照明最初遵循静态照明的对比,然后随着时间的推移逐渐累积为边际收益。建议未来进行纵向研究,以评估全年不同的日光可用性可能对测量参数产生的额外影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
JMIR mHealth and uHealth Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
12.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
159
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR mHealth and uHealth (JMU, ISSN 2291-5222) is a spin-off journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR mHealth and uHealth is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, and Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE), and in June 2017 received a stunning inaugural Impact Factor of 4.636. The journal focusses on health and biomedical applications in mobile and tablet computing, pervasive and ubiquitous computing, wearable computing and domotics. JMIR mHealth and uHealth publishes since 2013 and was the first mhealth journal in Pubmed. It publishes even faster and has a broader scope with including papers which are more technical or more formative/developmental than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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