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Publications (2)1.4 Total impact

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    Article: Effects of behavioral interventions on disruptive behavior and affect in demented nursing home residents.
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    ABSTRACT: Disruptive behaviors are prevalent in nursing home residents with dementia and often have negative consequences for the resident, caregiver, and others in the environment. Behavioral interventions might ameliorate them and have a positive effect on residents' mood (affect). This study tested two interventions-an activities of daily living and a psychosocial activity intervention-and a combination of the two to determine their efficacy in reducing disruptive behaviors and improving affect in nursing home residents with dementia. The study had three treatment groups (activities of daily living, psychosocial activity, and a combination) and two control groups (placebo and no intervention). Nursing assistants hired specifically for this study enacted the interventions under the direction of a master's prepared gerontological clinical nurse specialist. Nursing assistants employed at the nursing homes recorded the occurrence of disruptive behaviors. Raters analyzed videotapes filmed during the study to determine the interventions' influence on affect. Findings indicated significantly more positive affect but not reduced disruptive behaviors in treatment groups compared to control groups. The treatments did not specifically address the factors that may have been triggering disruptive behaviors. Interventions much more precisely designed than those employed in this study require development to quell disruptive behaviors. Nontargeted interventions might increase positive affect. Treatments that produce even a brief improvement in affect indicate improved quality of mental health as mandated by federal law.
    Nursing Research 06/2002; 51(4):219-28. · 1.40 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cognitive impairment and autonomy.
    Cornelia K. Beck, Theresa S. Vogelpohl
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    ABSTRACT: focus on the day-to-day exercise of autonomy [for cognitively impaired nursing home residents] that is an essential ingredient in an [elderly] individual's self-concept and perception of worth / look briefly at the following issues: (a) impediments to autonomy, (b) complicating issues and factors that affect autonomy for cognitively impaired residents, (c) consequences of allowing or disallowing autonomy, and (d) strategies for promoting autonomy in this group / use case examples from our research to illustrate the positive outcomes that are achievable when cognitively impaired residents are given a measure of autonomy, no matter how small (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)
    10/1995;