Implementation of personalized music listening for assisted living residents with dementia.
Personalized music listening (PML) has been touted as a safe and inexpensive means of improving the quality of life, mood, and behavior of persons with dementia. A PML program was implemented in an assisted living facility and evaluated across the five dimensions of the RE-AIM framework: reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance. The first 17 residents invited to participate were enrolled and followed over eight months. Effectiveness was evident in staff-reported mood improvement in 62% of encounters. Adoption was evident in qualitative feedback collected from medication technicians. Implementation was facilitated by low costs, engagement of external volunteers, highlighting outcomes that are relevant to staff, and attention to playlists over time. Maintenance required continued engagement of volunteers, ongoing fundraising, attention to facility staff engagement, and iterative adjustments to the program framework as staffing changes occurred. PML was found to be a meaningful intervention that is possible at a reasonable cost.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Quality of Life
- Quality Improvement
- Nursing
- Music Therapy
- Memory
- Humans
- Dementia
- Assisted Living Facilities
- 4205 Nursing
- 1110 Nursing
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Quality of Life
- Quality Improvement
- Nursing
- Music Therapy
- Memory
- Humans
- Dementia
- Assisted Living Facilities
- 4205 Nursing
- 1110 Nursing