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Touchscreen Technology to Improve Dementia Care Management for Older Adults Living in the Community
Author(s) -
Kaitlyn Lucas,
Katherine S. Judge
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
innovation in aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2399-5300
DOI - 10.1093/geroni/igab046.3540
Subject(s) - mood , face validity , psychology , content validity , construct validity , sadness , applied psychology , apathy , dementia , feeling , clinical psychology , medicine , disease , anger , social psychology , psychiatry , cognition , psychometrics , pathology
Chronic disease management challenges for persons living with dementia (PLWD) often includes difficulties communicating how their feeling or describing symptoms to caregivers. To address this issue, an interdisciplinary team is developing a touchscreen mobile technology that will allow the assessment of clinical information about the PLWD, such as sleep quality, appetite, pain level, and mood. The mobile technology also allows caregivers to share this information with providers in real-time from their homes. In the team’s effort to incorporate a graphic measure to assess mood into the technology, a literature review revealed no such measurement tool has been established and validated for assessment with PLWD. This study focused on developing a graphic clinical assessment tool that can be used to assess mood for PLWD and establishing the face and content validity for this assessment tool. A team that included multidisciplinary clinical experts and a graphic artist designed a series of pictures of facial expressions and body language depicting a continuum of mood states (i.e., happy through depressed). The research team consulted with existing artistic depictions of sadness expression, including medical illustrations depicting depression. Multiple iterations have resulted in a series of images that represent moods from happy to very sad. The team considered a number of factors in developing the images including gender, ethnicity, and race. Consensus on the construct validity was achieved by the expert clinical panel. Details of a follow-up study to evaluate construct validity will be presented.

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