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Título
Guidelines for psychosocial interventions in dementia care: a European survey and comparison
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
AGREE instrument
Dementia
Europe
Guidelines
Psychosocial intervention
Clasificación UNESCO
3201.05 Psicología Clínica
Fecha de publicación
2011
Editor
Wiley
Citación
Vasse, E., Vernooij-Dassen, M., Cantegreil, I., Franco, M., Dorenlot, P., Woods, B., Moniz-Cook, E., Vasse, E., Vernooij-Dassen, M., Cantegreil, I., Franco, M., Dorenlot, P., Woods, B., & Moniz-Cook, E. (2012). Guidelines for psychosocial interventions in dementia care: A European survey and comparison. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 27(1), Article 1. https://doi.org/10.1002/GPS.2687
Resumen
[EN]Objective: The effectiveness of psychosocial interventions in treating people with dementia and their
carers is increasingly emphasised in the literature. Dementia guidelines should summarise the scientific
evidence and best practice that is currently available, therefore, it should include recommendations for
psychosocial interventions. The aims of our study were (1) to collate dementia guidelines from countries
across Europe and to check whether they included sections about psychosocial interventions, and (2) to
compare the methodological quality and the recommendations for specific psychosocial interventions in
these guidelines.
Methods: The European dementia guidelines were inventoried. The methodological quality of the
guideline sections for psychosocial interventions was assessed with the (AGREE) Appraisal of Guidelines
Research and Evaluation instrument. The recommendations for specific psychosocial interventions were
extracted from each of these guidelines and compared.
Results: Guidelines for psychosocial interventions were found in five of 12 countries. Guideline
developers, methodological quality and appreciation of available evidence influenced the inclusion
of psychosocial interventions in dementia guidelines from Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and
the UK. The UK NICE SCIE guideline had the best methodological quality and included the most
recommendations for psychosocial interventions. Physical activity and carer interventions were recommended
the most across all guidelines.
Conclusion: The inclusion of psychosocial interventions in dementia guidelines is limited across Europe.
High-quality guidelines that include psychosocial interventions and are kept up to date with the
emerging evidence are needed. Throughout Europe, special attention to the implementation of evidencebased
psychosocial care is needed in the next few years.
URI
ISSN
0885-6230
DOI
10.1002/GPS.2687
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