"It's Feasible to Write a Song": A Feasibility Study Examining Group Therapeutic Songwriting for People Living With Dementia and Their Family Caregivers.

Title"It's Feasible to Write a Song": A Feasibility Study Examining Group Therapeutic Songwriting for People Living With Dementia and Their Family Caregivers.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsClark IN, Stretton-Smith PA, Baker FA, Lee Y-EC, Tamplin J
JournalFront Psychol
Volume11
Pagination1951
Date Published2020
ISSN1664-1078
Abstract

Background: Psychosocial interventions for people with dementia and their family caregivers together may sustain relationship quality and social connection. No previous music therapy research has examined the effects of group therapeutic songwriting (TSW) attended by people with dementia/family caregiver dyads.

Methods: This pre-post feasibility study aimed to examine the acceptability of a group TSW intervention for people with dementia/family caregiver dyads and test the sensitivity of the following outcomes: Quality of the Caregiver-Patient Relationship (QCPR, primary); Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia (CSDD) and Quality of Life-Alzheimer's Dementia for people with dementia, Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Assessment of Quality of Life-8 Dimensions (AQoL-8D); and Zarit Burden Interview for family caregivers. Six weekly 1 h sessions guided participants to identify preferred music, brainstorm ideas, create lyrics, and record songs. Qualitative interviews were conducted with dyads who completed the intervention.

Results: Fourteen dyads were recruited and completed baseline assessments. Participants with dementia were aged 62-92 years ( = 77, SD = 11). Caregiver participants (11 spouses, two daughters, one son) were aged 54-92 years ( = 67, SD = 10.1). Four dyads withdrew owing to declining health or inconvenience before the program commenced ( = 2) and after attending 1-2 sessions ( = 2). Ten dyads formed four homogeneous TSW groups (71% completion). No statistically significant changes were detected for any measure. High QCPR ratings at baseline ( = 57.1) and follow-up ( = 57.4) demonstrated sustained relationship quality. For participants with dementia, large effect sizes for the CSDD suggested trends toward decreased depression ( = -0.83) and improved mood ( = -0.88). For family caregivers, a large effect size suggested a trend toward improvement for the AQoL-8D sub-domain examining independent living ( = -0.93). Qualitative data indicated that session design and delivery were acceptable, and TSW was a positive shared experience with personal benefits, which supported rather than changed relationship quality.

Conclusion: High retention and qualitative data indicate that TSW was well received by participants. Effect sizes suggest that group TSW for dyads may have beneficial impacts on depression for people with dementia and quality of life for family caregivers. Future research with a fully powered sample is recommended to further examine the psychosocial impacts of group TSW for people living with dementia/family caregiver dyads.

DOI10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01951
Alternate JournalFront Psychol
PubMed ID32849143
PubMed Central IDPMC7426520