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Preventive Intervention to Promote Healthy Ageing

Support of Healthy Ageing: Using Educational and Psychosocial In-terventions to Maintain Mental Health, for Prevention and Timely Diagnosis of Depression, Anxiety, and Cognitive Disorders of Older Adults in a Community

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05637177
Enrollment
200
Registered
2022-12-05
Start date
2022-01-01
Completion date
2024-12-31
Last updated
2025-02-25

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Preventive Intervention

Keywords

Mental health, quality of life, anxiety, depression, population ageing

Brief summary

The aim of the project is the support of healthy ageing of older adults in acommunity. Efficient educational and psychosocial intervention will besuggested and verified to prevent anxiety, depression, and cognitivedisorders of selected older adults, to im-prove their self-esteem,meaningfulness of life, sense of coherence, quality of life, and attitudes toold age. Correlations among anxiety, depression, cognitive functions, andcertain psychosocial aspects will be analyzed.

Detailed description

The main objective of the project is to determine the efficiency ofeducational pro-grams and psychosocial interventions to maintain mentalhealth, to prevent and timely diagnose any depression, anxieties, andcognitive disorders in older adults living in a community. Furthermore, theaim is to ascertain the incidence of depression, anxiety, and cognitivedisorders in these older adults and its correlation to the assessment of lifemeaningfulness, self-respect, attitudes to old age and ageing, and the levelof social support. An intervention study will be carried out. A preventionprogram will be for-mulated based on the individual needs of older adults asidentified in the focus groups. Selected interventions will be performed in apresent form (face to face) as well as distance form (e-Health) and will runat least for 6 months. The assessment of anxiety, depression, cognitivefunctions, and other psychosocial aspects will be done before theinterventions start, when they finish, and 3 months after that. Based on-quantitative analysis, there will be evaluated the efficiency of the providedinterven-tion with respect to depression, anxiety, cognitive function, andpsychosocial aspects (attitudes to old age, self-esteem, the sense ofcoherence, quality of life, level of social support). Older adults in thecentrum for prevention and support healthy ageing in the community will beincluded in the research sample. Based on the findings, recommen-dations will be formulated regarding the selected interventions used in communi-tycare.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALAnging Wisely

The program includes 11 meetings of two hours in a group of up to eight people. The sessions are held weekly. Each lesson is given a homework assignment. A total of 10 groups will take place.

BEHAVIORALMusic therapy

Music therapy sessions are held once a week for 60 minutes for 12 weeks. The maximum number of participants per group is 12. A total of 10 groups will be implemented.

Reminiscence therapy sessions are held once a week for 60 minutes for 12 weeks. The maximum number of participants per group is 10. A total of 5 groups will be implemented.

BEHAVIORALCognitive training

Intervention cognitive training will take place once a week for 45 minutes for 20 weeks. Seniors can choose from two options: 1. group training full-time or home training (online) using the comprehensive training program MENTEM.

BEHAVIORALEducational activities

Interventions in educational activities will run for one academic year. In total, seniors will attend 16 lectures in each educational module. The lectures will run 1 x 14 days for 90 minutes.

Sponsors

University of Ostrava
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
60 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* age ≥ 60 years * living at home in Moravian-Silesian region * consent with partici-pation in the study * no dementia diagnosis.

Exclusion criteria

* dementia diagnosis

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Assessment of depression: The Geriatric Depression Scale - GDS12 weeksThe Geriatric Depression Scale may be used with healthy, medically ill, and mild to moderately cognitively impaired older adults. It has been extensively used incommunity, acute care, and long-term care settings. A Short Form GDS consisting of 15 questions was developed in 1986. The total score of the Geriatric Depression Scale can ranged from 0 to 15 points, and higher score indicates more depression symptoms. Scores of 0-4 are considered normal, 5-8 indicate mild depression; 9-11 indicate moderate depression; and12-15 indicate severe depression.
Assessment of anxiety: Geriatric Anxiety Inventory - GAI12 weeksThe Geriatric Anxiety Inventory Scale consists of 20 Agree/Disagree items designed to assess the typical common anxiety symptoms. The total score of the Geriatric Anxiety Inventory Scale can ranged from 0 to 20 points, and higher score indicates more anxiety.
Assessment of cognitive functioning: Montreal Cognitive Assessment - MoCA12 weeksThe MoCA evaluates different types of cognitive abilities. Theseinclude - orientation, short-term memory, executivefunction/visuospatial ability (language abilities, abstraction, animalnaming, attention), clock-drawing test. Scores on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment range from 0 to 30, with a score of 26 and higher generally considered normal. The scoring breakdown is as follows: visuospatial and executivefunctioning (5 points), animal naming (3 points), attention (6 points), language (3 points), abstraction (2 points), delayed recall (5 points), orientation (6 points), Test MoCA makes it possible to identify sooner the early cognitive disorders, because it evaluates one's memory in detail and analyzes the executive functions.
Assessment of quality of life: OPQOL-CZ-20 (Older People's Quality of Life Questionnai-re).12 weeksThe Older People's Quality of Life Questionnaire (OPQoL-brief) consisted of 13 statements, with the participants being asked to indicate the extent to which they agree with each statement by selecting one of five possible options (strongly disagree, disagree, neither agree nor disagree, agree and strongly agree). The range in the original version is based on the principle of point allocation (1-5). The items are summed to provide a total OPQoL-brief score. The total score of Older People's Quality of Life Questionnaire ranges from 13 to 65 and higher scores indicate better quality of life. The OPQoL-brief questionnaire also includes a preliminary single item on global quality of life. This single item is not scored with the OPQOL, it is coded as very good to very bad.
Assessment of the sense of coherence: The Sense of Coherence Scale - SOC-1312 weeksThe short form of the Sense of Coherence Scale -SOC-13 scale consists of 13 items that comprise three components: comprehensibility (to which 5 items contribute), manageability (4 items), and meaningfulness (4 items). The respondents indicate agreement or disagreement on a 7-category semantic differential scale with two anchoring responses tailored to the content of each item. The total score of the Sense of Coherence Scale can range from 13 to 91, and a higher score indicates higher sense of coherence.
Assessment of Life satisfaction: Life Satisfaction Index for the Third Age - Short Form - LSITA-SF12 weeksThe Life Satisfaction Index for the Thirds Age - Short form questionnaire contains 12 items with options on the 6-point Likert scale: Strongly Disagree (6), Disagree (5), Somewhat Disagree (4), Somewhat Agree (4), Agree (2), and Strongly Agree (1). The total scores of the The Life Satisfaction Index for the Thirds Age - Short form questionnaire range from 12 to 72. Higher scores mean lower life satisfaction.
Assessment of self-esteem: Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale - RSES12 weeksRosenberg Self-Esteem Scale - RSES is a 10-item Likert type scale, with items answered on a four-point scale: from Strongly Agree (SA) toStrongly Disagree (SD). The total scores of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale rank from 0 to 25 points. Score from 15 to 25 shows normal self-esteem and score of less than 15 shows low self-esteem. TheRosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, a widely used self-report instrument forevaluating individual self-esteem, was investigated using itemresponse theory.
Assessment of attitudes to ageing: Attitudes to Ageing Questionnaire - AAQ12 weeksThe 24 items of the Attitudes to Ageing Questionnaire scale are scored on a five-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree, 5 = strongly agree). It consists of three broaddimensions of ageing: 1. physical functioning (8 items including health,dynamics, vitality, exercising), 2. psychological growth (8 items, whichreflect explicit gains in relation to self and others; the positive focus ofageing, life orientation, connection with wisdom and fruits of life,coping, acceptance, communication with young generation), 3.psychosocial losses (8 items, when old age is primarily described as anegative experience including losses, deficiency, exclusion, loss ofindependence, depression, and loneliness). Each factor has eight questions with domains returning minimum scores of 8 and maximum of 40. Higher score indicates better attitudes to ageing.
Assessment of social support: Social Support Questionnaire - Short Form (SSQ6)12 weeksThis instrument has 6 items that measure perceived social support. Foreach of the 6 items, respondents indicate the number of peopleavailable to provide support in each of 6 areas and then rate theoverall level of satisfaction with the support given in each of the areas. The total scores of the Social support Questionnaire rank from 0 to 6 points. Higher score indicates more social support.

Countries

Czechia

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 9, 2026