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Boosting self-cueing to maintain independence in dementia

Project Overview

Everyday activities such as cooking often become difficult for people living with dementia. We have found that they can still do the physical bits, such as filling a kettle or peeling a potato. The problem is with the cognitive ‘glue’ that sticks the physical steps together. Research has shown that self-cueing can help children finish tasks. Self-cueing can also help people with aphasia communicate. Boosting self-cueing could help people living with dementia continue everyday tasks.
Can we boost individual’s self-cueing during everyday activities to maintain independence? We will break this into three questions: (i) How do people living with dementia self-cue during everyday activities? (ii) How do individuals without dementia self-cue during everyday activities? We will look at why cues succeed or fail in both groups. (iii)Use anwers to (i) and (ii) to generate self-cueing boosters and evaluate if they help people living with dementia carry out everyday activities.
Part (i) and Part (iii) will be carried out in the homes of people living with dementia. This is to maximise the benefits of familiarity and environmental cues during everyday activities. We will record them carrying out everyday activities. We will also ask them to describe what they are doing as they go along. Part (ii) will be carried out and recorded in the Home Lab at Toronto Rehabilitation Institute under controlled conditions.
Boosting self-cueing can support people living with dementia to continue their everyday activities. Maintaining independence can delay or reduce demands on family members or services. This can help people living with dementia stay at home longer. Maintaining independence in daily activities is also important for promoting a positive identity for people living with dementia. The findings can be extended to other activities that people living with dementia want to keep doing outside the home.
Difficulties with everyday activities often lead to families or home care services taking over cooking and laundry and other daily activities. This can speed up people with dementia losing their skills and independence. Once consequence can be moving into long term care. Supporting people living with dementia to continue with their everyday activities by boosting self-cueing can maintain their independence and allow them to age in place for longer.

Principal Investigator

Arlene Astell , University of Toronto

Partners and Donors

Alzheimer Society of Canada

Project Ongoing

Boosting self-cueing to maintain independence in dementia

  • Grant Type

    Capacity building grants

  • Area of research

    Neurodegeneration

  • Disease Area

    Alzheimer’s

  • Competition

    Alzheimer Society Research Program (ASRP)

  • Province

    Ontario

  • Start Date

    2024

  • Total Grant Amount

    $99,991

  • Health Canada Contribution

    $51,026

Contact Us

1200 McGill College Avenue
Suite 1600, Montreal, Quebec
H3B 4G7

+1 (514) 989-2989 info@braincanada.ca

Please note all online donations will receive an electronic tax receipt, issued by Brain Canada Foundation.

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Territorial acknowledgement

The offices of Brain Canada Foundation are located on the traditional, ancestral territory of the Kanien'kehá:ka Peoples, a place which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst nations. We honour and pay respect to elders past, present and emerging, and dedicate ourselves to moving forward in the spirit of partnership, collaboration, and reconciliation. In our work, we focus our efforts on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action, particularly those that pertain to improving health for Indigenous Peoples and that focus on advancing our own learning on Indigenous issues.

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