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| ID | Type | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1K23AG073516-01 | U.S. NIH Grant/Contract | View source |
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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| National Institute on Aging (NIA) | NIH |
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The purpose of this study is to design and test a decision-making program that is tailored to support adult daughters making healthcare decisions for their parents who are living with memory loss to improve the quality of life of African American families.
There are two phases of this research study. The first phase will collect information by surveys and/or interviews. The surveys and interviews will ask questions about demographics (e.g., age, race/ethnicity), culture, health, family dynamics, caregiving, and healthcare experiences. The surveys will be completed by all eligible adult daughters and parents with memory loss in pairs. The interviews will be completed by a smaller number of pairs and by all former adult daughter caregivers.
The general scope of topics is caregiving experiences, cultural identity, healthcare decisions for persons living with Alzheimer's disease, and related dementias, health, and well-being. The research team will identify and examine key factors that will lead to designing and testing the feasibility of a culturally tailored prototype intervention for African American dementia dyads/families of persons living with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease and related dementias.
This is a survey/questionnaire and interview study that will examine how healthcare decisions are made for African American parents living with memory loss by African American adult daughter caregivers to develop a prototype intervention to improve how these decisions are made and improve the quality of life of African American parents living with memory loss and their African American adult daughter caregivers.
Recruitment will occur through established connections at Emory University Goizueta Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Minority Engagement Core, Emory Healthcare Integrated Memory Care Clinic, and Emory University.
Recruitment will take place in metro Atlanta and across the United States using a study flyer and video.
The flyer will include the phone number, email address of the research team, and a quick response (QR) code for potential participants to contact the research team. The video will give information about the principal investigator (PI) and the research study as a strategy to build rapport with potential participants and assuage distrust in research. Interviews will occur remotely after participants have completed the screening process and are deemed eligible for the study. This is not a no-contact study.
The data collected will be de-identified. Privacy of existing data is not a concern. This study has two phases. The first phase will consist of surveys/questionnaires and semi-structured interviews via Zoom from both the parents living with memory loss and their adult daughters as well as semi-structured interviews via Zoom of past adult daughter caregivers whose parent(s) have died or are in long-term care facilities and adult daughters caring for a parent with severe dementia only. For past adult daughter caregivers whose parents have died, the parent will need to have died at least 12 months before enrolling in the study.
In the first part of phase two (phase 2a), participants will be key informants who participate in focus group sessions using design thinking strategies to develop the prototype intervention. Key informants will consist of parent-adult daughter dyads, past adult daughter caregivers, and adult daughter caregivers of persons with severe dementia. In the last part of phase two (phase 2b), a pretest/posttest design with two follow-ups will be completed by a new set of African American parent-adult daughter dementia dyad participants. The interactions will include surveys/questionnaires and semi-structured interviews.
Data will be collected by computer/tablet and/or telephone. For participants with limited access to a computer/tablet, the surveys may be completed via paper/pencil. The general scope of topics is caregiving experiences, cultural identity, healthcare decisions for persons living with Alzheimer's disease, and related dementias, health, and well-being.
In phase one, surveys/questionnaires for persons with mild to moderate dementia will take 0.67 hours and 1 hour for adult daughter caregivers. In phase one, the semi-structured interviews will last 1 hour in total for both parent and daughter. Semi-structured interviews with past adult daughter caregivers and adult daughter caregivers of persons with severe dementia will last approximately 0.75 hours. In phase 2, key informants will have three sessions that last approximately 1.5 hours to assist with the development of the prototype intervention. In phase 2, the pretest/posttest surveys/questionnaire should last 0.33 hours for parents living with dementia and 0.67 hours for adult daughters at baseline and the 2 follow-ups. The last follow-up will consist of one semi-structured interview that will last about 0.5 hours.
Phase 1 will allow collecting and analyzing the necessary data to develop the prototype intervention that will be developed in Phase 2a and used in Phase 2b: the intervention phase.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prototype Intervention | Experimental | The prototype intervention will be likely family-based and focused on issues of communication, problem-solving, health system literacy, and family systems, all considered in the context of the African-American (AA) adult daughter role and cultural identity. |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prototype Intervention | Behavioral | The prototype intervention will be likely family-based and focused on issues of communication, problem-solving, health system literacy, and family systems, all considered in the context of the African-American (AA) adult daughter role and cultural identity. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Participant retention | Acceptability of the intervention will be assessed with participant retention. Retention of 80% of participants from baseline to 3-month follow-up is considered successful. Attendance of dyads during program sessions during the intervention phase. The goal is to maintain ≥ 70% attendance at program sessions | eight weeks |
| Usability of Intervention | Usability of the intervention will be assessed with a qualitative interview with the African American parent-adult daughter dyads after completing the intervention. There is not a summary score for the open-ended questions asked during the interview. | Upon completion of the intervention (estimated to be 8 weeks) |
| Percentage of recruitment goal achieved | The feasibility of the intervention will be assessed as successful recruitment of study participants. This study aims to recruit 20 African American parent-adult daughter dementia dyads in ≤ 6 months. The actual recruited number of dyads will be reported as the percentage of dyads recruited within 6 months divided by 20 (actual/goal). | Up to 6 months after the start of recruitment |
| Change in Quality of Life-Alzheimer's Disease (QoL-AD) Scale Score | The preliminary efficacy of the intervention will be assessed with the Quality of Life-Alzheimer's Disease (QoL-AD) scale. The QoL-AD has 13 items which are scored as poor = 1, fair = 2, good = 3, excellent = 4. The total score ranges from 13 to 52 and higher scores indicate a greater quality of life. | 0-month, 1 month, 3 months |
| Change in Decision Self-Efficacy Scale Score | The preliminary efficacy of the intervention will be assessed with the Decision Self-Efficacy Scale. The Decision Self-Efficacy Scale has 11 items which are scored as not at all confident = 0 to very confident = 5. The total score ranges from 0 to 100 and higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy. |
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For persons living with memory loss or cognitive impairment/Alzheimer's disease and related dementias(PLWD):
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Caregiver:
Inclusion Criteria:
Key informants:
Inclusion Criteria:
Past caregiver:
Inclusion Criteria:
Caregiver of persons with severe dementia
Inclusion Criteria:
- Meet criteria for caregiver except actively providing care for a parent with severe dementia based on the family caregiver report on the Dementia Severity Rating Scale.
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kalisha Bonds Johnson, PhD RN PMHNP | Contact | 404-727-5937 | kbonds@emory.edu | |
| Kenneth Hepburn | Contact | 404.712.9286 | khepbur@emory.edu |
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Kalisha Bonds Johnson, PhD RN PMHNP | Emory University | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. | Recruiting | Washington D.C. | District of Columbia | 20009 | United States | |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40081986 | Derived | Bonds Johnson K, Lyons KS, Epps F, Daniel G, Monin JK, Powell W, Hepburn K. Development and evaluation of a healthcare decision-making intervention for African American parent-adult daughter dementia dyads: a mixed-methods study protocol. BMJ Open. 2025 Mar 13;15(3):e099976. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-099976. |
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Researchers will share demographic data, study measures, and outcome variables
six months after publication.
Researchers will share the data with qualified researchers who complete a formal data sharing agreement for research purposes only.
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D003704 | Dementia |
| D000544 | Alzheimer Disease |
| D000084802 | Caregiver Burden |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001927 | Brain Diseases |
| D002493 | Central Nervous System Diseases |
| D009422 | Nervous System Diseases |
| D019965 | Neurocognitive Disorders |
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20 dyads (PLWDs and their adult daughter caregivers) will be enrolled to participate in the behavioral intervention together.
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|
| 0-month, 1 month, 3 months |
| Emory Healthcare Integrated Memory Care Clinic |
| Recruiting |
| Atlanta |
| Georgia |
| 30329 |
| United States |
| Emory University Goizueta Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Minority Engagement Core | Recruiting | Atlanta | Georgia | 30329 | United States |
| Metro-Atlanta | Recruiting | Atlanta | Georgia | 30340 | United States |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
| D024801 | Tauopathies |
| D019636 | Neurodegenerative Diseases |
| D013315 | Stress, Psychological |
| D001526 | Behavioral Symptoms |
| D001519 | Behavior |