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A video-based education and analysis system for professional caregivers of cognitive impaired elderlies
Miwako Honda, MD1, Shogo Ishikawa2, Yusuke Okino3, Atsushi Nakazawa4, Yoichi Takebayashi5, Candida Delmas6, Rosette Marescotti7, Yves Gineste8.
Background
In the rapid growth of an aging society, The behavioural psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD)
management is one of the key challenges.
Objectives
To evaluate the differences between conventional care and Humanitude® care, and to verify the validity
of the analysis by informatics on the professional caregiver’s performance to dementia patients.
Method
The French-originated multimodal comprehensive care methodology; Humanitude® was compared to
conventional care. Oral care and walking assistance for the same patients were evaluated by different
care methodologies. The care provided was video-recorded and analysed by three elements of
communication modalities: eye contact, verbal communication, touch, as well as the comprehensiveness
of the modalities. Analysis was done manually by researchers of artificial intelligence and automatically
using informatics analytical software.
Results
Two caregivers who performed multimodal care methodology and two caregivers who performed
conventional care were enrolled in the study. Communication elements: eye contact, verbal
communication and touch during the oral care were 0%, 20%, 0% by conventional care and 38%, 35%,
50% by Humanitude® respectively. In walking assistance, eye contact, verbal communication and touch
were 0%, 40%, 0% by conventional care and 13%, 22%, 36% by Humanitude® respectively. There
was a significant difference in the two groups (p<0.05). The comprehensiveness, to perform more than
two modalities of care simultaneously, also showed significant differences. Auto-video analysis by an
informatics software had the same output as manual analysis.
Conclusions
There was significant difference in the three care modalities and its comprehensiveness when compared
between Humanitude® and conventional care. Auto-video analysis would be effective on standardised
training for caregivers and would reduce the training cost.
Affiliation:
- National Hospital Organisation Tokyo Medical Centre, Japan
- Shizuoka University, Japan
- Shizuoka University, Japan
- Kyoto University, Japan
- Kyoto University, Japan
- University of Montpellier, France
- Institut Gineste-Marescotti, France
- Institut Gineste-Marescotti, France
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Indexation |
Indexed by |
MyJurnal (2021) |
H-Index
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2 |
Immediacy Index
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0.000 |
Rank |
0 |
Indexed by |
Scopus 2020 |
Impact Factor
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CiteScore (0.3) |
Rank |
Q4 (Multidisciplinary) |
Additional Information |
SJR (0.12) |
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