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Sponsors and Collaborators: |
University of Pittsburgh National Institute on Aging (NIA) National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) |
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Information provided by: | University of Pittsburgh |
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00178165 |
Established in 1995, Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer's Caregiver Health (REACH) is a unique, multi-site research program sponsored by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) and the National Institute on Nursing Research (NINR). The primary purpose of REACH is to carry out social and behavioral research on interventions designed to enhance family caregiving for Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. Specifically, REACH has two goals: to test the effectiveness of multiple different interventions and to evaluate the pooled effect of REACH interventions overall. REACH grew out of a National Institute of Health (NIH) initiative that acknowledged the well-documented burdens associated with family caregiving as well as the existence of promising family caregiver interventions reported in the literature.
Condition | Intervention |
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Dementia Alzheimer Disease |
Procedure: Skill Training Condition – problem solving training Procedure: REACH for TLC (Telephone Linked Computer) system |
Study Type: | Interventional |
Study Design: | Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study |
Official Title: | Coordinating Center for Enhancing Alzheimer Disease and Related Disorder Caregiving |
Estimated Enrollment: | 1200 |
Study Start Date: | September 1996 |
Estimated Study Completion Date: | November 2001 |
Six sites (Boston, Birmingham, Memphis, Miami, Palo Alto, and Philadelphia) developed and evaluated a variety of multi-component interventions for family caregivers of persons with Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) at the mild or moderate level of impairment. The multi-component interventions implemented across the six sites included: 1) Individual Information and Support strategies, 2) Group Support and Family Systems therapy, 3) Psychoeducational and Skill-based Training approaches, 4) Home-based Environmental interventions,, and 5) Enhanced Technology Support Systems. Although the interventions were derived from diverse theoretical models, they are all consistent with basic health-stress models in which the goal is to change the nature of specific stressors (e.g. problem behavior of the care recipient), their appraisal, and/or the caregivers response to the stressors. All of the REACH interventions were guided by detailed treatment manuals and certification procedures that assured that the interventions were delivered consistently over time at each site. Careful attention was also paid to the issue of treatment integrity. Different strategies were used at each site to induce and assess all three fundamental aspects of treatment integrity: delivery, receipt, and enactment (Burgio, et al., 2001). In addition, because the caregiving experience in race and ethnic minority families is particularly neglected in the field, there was a strong emphasis placed on the inclusion of African American and Hispanic caregivers. Thus, assessments as well as interventions were tailored at each site to meet the needs of culturally diverse racial/ethnic majority and minority populations.
All of the REACH sites shared several common goals, including: 1) designing theory-driven caregiving interventions to test hypotheses about intervention processes and their effect on family caregivers, 2) specifying intervention components that help us understand the pathways through which interventions produce desired outcomes, 3) developing a standardized outcome protocol to assess the impact of different strategies on caregivers and their care recipients within each site and across sites, and 4) creating a common database that would facilitate pooling data across sites. In addition, standard selection criteria were adopted by REACH.
Although REACH has some of the features of a traditional multi-site randomized controlled clinical trial (e.g., random assignment of participants to treatment and control conditions, common database and outcome measures, and identical measurement intervals across sites), it differs on one key dimension—the interventions varied across sites. REACH was designed to examine the feasibility and outcomes of multiple different intervention approaches, rather than to provide definitive information on the efficacy of one specific intervention strategy for enhancing caregiver outcomes. The strength of this approach is that it efficiently yields information about the effectiveness of different approaches to AD caregiving as well as the combined effects of active treatment versus controls, as reported in the planned meta-analysis.
REACH successfully randomized 1222 caregiver/care recipient dyads representing both majority and minority populations to 15 different conditions.
Ages Eligible for Study: | 21 Years and older |
Genders Eligible for Study: | Both |
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: | No |
CORE CARE RECIPIENT INCLUSION/EXCLUSION CRITERIA
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
CORE CAREGIVER INCLUSION/EXCLUSION CRITERIA
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
Second Level Review If the caregiver has been inconsistent with answers or repeated answers, then the interviewer will administer the SPMSQ. The interviewer will then discuss with the PI and coordinate another phone call with the caregiver.
If in the course of the telephone screen the research assistant believes that there may be difficulties for the caregiver regarding travel arrangements, hesitancy to answer questions, or other specific items (site-specific indications), the research assistant will refer to the PI for review.
All potential caregivers will receive a follow-up phone call for second level exclusion from the trial when appropriate.
United States, Alabama | |
University of Alabama at Birmingham | |
Birmingham, Alabama, United States, 35294-2041 | |
United States, California | |
Stanford University and Veterans Affairs | |
Menlo Park, California, United States, 94025 | |
United States, Florida | |
University of Miami at Miami, Center on Adult Development and Aging | |
Miami, Florida, United States, 33136 | |
United States, Pennsylvania | |
Thomas Jefferson University at Philadelphia, Center for Applied Research on Aging and Health | |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, 19107 | |
United States, Tennessee | |
University of Tennessee Health Science Center | |
Memphis, Tennessee, United States, 38163 |
Principal Investigator: | Richard Schulz, Ph.D. | Professor of Psychiatry and Director, University Center for Social and Urban Research, University of Pittsburgh |
Study ID Numbers: | AG13305-01, NR13269, AG13313, AG13297, AG13289, AG13265, AG13255, AG13305 |
Study First Received: | September 13, 2005 |
Last Updated: | September 13, 2005 |
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: | NCT00178165 |
Health Authority: | United States: Federal Government |
Family Caregivers Dementia Alzheimer Disease Randomized Controlled Trial Intervention Studies |
Delirium, Dementia, Amnestic, Cognitive Disorders Mental Disorders Alzheimer Disease Central Nervous System Diseases Neurodegenerative Diseases |
Brain Diseases Dementia Cognition Disorders Delirium |
Nervous System Diseases Tauopathies |