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Wrist accelerometry for monitoring dementia agitation behaviour in clinical settings: A scoping review

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posted on 2024-08-07, 05:57 authored by JCW Cheung, BPH So, KHM Ho, DWC Wong, AHF Lam, DSK Cheung
Agitated behaviour among elderly people with dementia is a challenge in clinical management. Wrist accelerometry could be a versatile tool for making objective, quantitative, and long-term assessments. The objective of this review was to summarise the clinical application of wrist accelerometry to agitation assessments and ways of analysing the data. Two authors independently searched the electronic databases CINAHL, PubMed, PsycInfo, EMBASE, and Web of Science. Nine (n = 9) articles were eligible for a review. Our review found a significant association between the activity levels (frequency and entropy) measured by accelerometers and the benchmark instrument of agitated behaviour. However, the performance of wrist accelerometry in identifying the occurrence of agitation episodes was unsatisfactory. Elderly people with dementia have also been monitored in existing studies by investigating the at-risk time for their agitation episodes (daytime and evening). Consideration may be given in future studies on wrist accelerometry to unifying the parameters of interest and the cut-off and measurement periods, and to using a sampling window to standardise the protocol for assessing agitated behaviour through wrist accelerometry.

History

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Location

Lausanne, Switzerland

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Frontiers in Psychiatry

Volume

13

Article number

ARTN 913213

Pagination

1-12

ISSN

1664-0640

eISSN

1664-0640

Publisher

Frontiers Media