Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research
Date Submitted: May 6, 2024
Date Accepted: May 6, 2025
Environmental triggers of specific subtypes of agitation in people with dementia: an observational study
ABSTRACT
Background:
Among the most critical behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia, agitation can lead to decreased quality of life of people with dementia and their caregivers. However, limited research exists quantifying environmental triggers of agitation or its subtypes.
Objective:
In this paper, we aim to quantify the relationships between specific environmental factors and agitation, as well as specific agitation subtypes, such as motor and verbal agitation.
Methods:
Using a cross-sectional repeated measures design, integrated into a specialized neuropsychiatric ward for patients with dementia and severe behavioral and psychological problems, people with dementia were each included for one week. During this period, the Pittsburgh Agitation Scale was filled in by the nurses on the ward following an Experience Sampling methodology to assess a patient’s agitation level on a momentary basis. Continuous environmental data (light, sound and temperature) was collected from fixed sensors mounted on the ward. Generalized linear mixed models were used to quantify relationships between environmental variables and outcome variables (agitation, motor agitation, and verbal agitation). These models accounted for the hierarchical nature of our dataset as well as confounding factors, such as time of day and the room-level location of the patient. The time window for analysis was selected through comparison of beta coefficient estimates across various window lengths. Models were built up sequentially, per outcome variable, using selected features per environmental modality.
Results:
Thirty-seven people with dementia have been included in the study thus far. We found that different environmental factors were most informative for different subtypes of agitation: mean light level (β: -0.61, C.I.: -1.12 - -0.10, p: .02) for motor agitation, and standard deviation of sound level (β: 0.68, C.I.: 0.34-1.02, p: <.001) for verbal agitation. Contextual factors such as time of day (β range: 0.51-0.94) and room-level location (β range: 0.85-1.08) were also significant predictors of agitation.
Conclusions:
Integrating the key differences in predictors between verbal and motor agitation, identified here, could substantially improve subtype-specific model performance. Overall, these findings can aid in the development of predictive models for agitation and enable subsequent just-in-time interventions, improving quality of life for both patients and caregivers.
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