Polden Megan, Faulkner Thomas, Holland Carol, Hanna Kerry, Ward Kym, Ahmed Faraz, Brown Heather, Barrow Hazel, Main Jeanette, Mann Stella, Pendrill Steve, Giebel Clarissa
Department of Primary Care & Mental Health, University of Liverpool, UK.
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration North West Coast, UK.
Dementia (London). 2025 May;24(4):738-766. doi: 10.1177/14713012241273837. Epub 2024 Aug 15.
Music-based interventions have been found to benefit people living with dementia and have positive impacts on cognition and well-being. Most people with dementia live in the community and compared to people with dementia in residential care often have less access to music-based interventions. There are many forms of music interventions and singing has shown particular promise; in the realm of music interventions. It is important to determine what aspects of music interventions yield the most benefits for people with dementia. This review aimed to synthesise evidence on the impacts of singing interventions on quality of life, mood and neuropsychiatric symptoms for community-dwelling people with dementia. We systematically searched three electronic databases (PsycINFO, MEDLINE and Web of Science) for studies reporting on singing interventions with community-dwelling people with dementia. Studies were eligible for inclusion if they reported on a singing intervention with people living with dementia that included an outcome measure of quality of life, mood or agitation. Fourteen publications were identified and included in this review, with a total of = 361 people with dementia. Despite some inconsistencies across the literature, evidence suggests that singing interventions led to an improvement in mood and a reduction in agitation levels in people living with dementia. There was no strong evidence to suggest that singing interventions led to significant improvements in quality of life. This review highlights the potential of singing interventions as an effective psychosocial intervention for community-dwelling people with dementia. For key developments in this area, we urge that future studies include a control group where possible which will allow for more robust examinations of singing interventions and allow intervention effects to be distinguished from general deterioration in dementia symptoms over time.
基于音乐的干预措施已被发现对痴呆症患者有益,并对认知和幸福感产生积极影响。大多数痴呆症患者生活在社区中,与住在养老院的痴呆症患者相比,他们获得基于音乐的干预措施的机会往往更少。音乐干预有多种形式,唱歌已显示出特别的前景;在音乐干预领域。确定音乐干预的哪些方面能为痴呆症患者带来最大益处很重要。本综述旨在综合关于唱歌干预对社区居住的痴呆症患者生活质量、情绪和神经精神症状影响的证据。我们系统地检索了三个电子数据库(心理学文摘数据库、医学期刊数据库和科学引文索引数据库),以查找有关对社区居住的痴呆症患者进行唱歌干预的研究报告。如果研究报告了对痴呆症患者进行的唱歌干预,且包括生活质量、情绪或激动程度的结果测量,则该研究符合纳入标准。共确定了14篇出版物并纳入本综述,总共有361名痴呆症患者。尽管文献中存在一些不一致之处,但证据表明唱歌干预可改善痴呆症患者的情绪并降低其激动水平。没有有力证据表明唱歌干预能显著改善生活质量。本综述强调了唱歌干预作为对社区居住的痴呆症患者有效的社会心理干预措施的潜力。对于该领域的关键发展,我们敦促未来的研究尽可能包括一个对照组,这将有助于更有力地检验唱歌干预措施,并使干预效果与痴呆症症状随时间的普遍恶化区分开来。