Bach D, Bach M, Böhmer F, Frühwald T, Grilc B
Allgemeine Poliklinik der Stadt Wien, Vienna, Austria.
Age Ageing. 1995 May;24(3):222-6. doi: 10.1093/ageing/24.3.222.
In this prospective treatment study, the effects of two different occupational therapy strategies were compared in two samples of long-term geriatric inpatients (n = 22 in each group) with slight to moderate dementia according to DSM-III-R. Psychometric ratings after 12 weeks and 24 weeks of treatment have demonstrated that the application of a reactivating occupational therapy programme in addition to functional rehabilitation is significantly more efficient than the application of functional rehabilitation alone on levels of cognitive performance, psychosocial functioning, and the degree of contentedness with life. These results support the assumption that geriatric patients, if stimulated for a longer time, are able to mobilize latent resources of cognitive and psychosocial performance. Reactivating occupational therapy has a place in the treatment of long-term geriatric patients.