Effectiveness of Cognitive Interventions in Older Adults: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
3. Results
3.1. Inclusion of Studies
3.2. Characteristics of the Participants
3.3. Characteristics of the Studies
3.4. Measures of Results and Effects
3.5. Main Results Found in the Systematic Reviews and/or Meta-Analyses
4. Discussion
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- Several cognitive skills worked on at the same time [101].
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- Inclusion of other components related to quality of life, such as decreasing anxiety and stress; participation in challenging activities and novel cognitive tasks; social participation; physical activity; and healthy sleep habits [26].
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- Employment of personal or internal strategies (like using mnemonic rules) and environmental or external strategies (using calendars, agendas, etc.) [32].
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- Measures of daily functioning included, in order to analyze whether the improvement in cognitive functioning is generalized to activities of daily living.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Review | Main Characteristics | Participants | Interventions | Skills Measured | Follow-On | Effect Size |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bhome et al., (2018) | Comm. Context 22 RCTs No patients with MCI or dementia, or significant psychiatric or physical comorbidities | Total N: 1639 TG = 824 CG = 815 MA = no data GEN = no data YE = no data CF = no data | TG = Cognitive training (by applying manual or self-applied strategies) CG = Passive control, waiting list, informational talks or group activities at the community center FORMAT = Group interventions FREQUENCY = Programs from 4 to 16 weeks, especially 8-week programs, with approximately 1.5 h sessions, from 1 to 3 weekly sessions) | General cognitive functioning Subjective psychological well-being | All pre-post 4 follow-ups (between 1 and 6 months). | 0.13 General cognitive functioning 0.23 Subjective psychological well-being |
Chiu et al., 2017 | Comm. Context 31 RCTs Interventions in cognitive training Older adults with normal cognitive functions, with no diagnosis of MCI or dementia | N total = 5499 TG = 3555 and CG = 1944 MA = 72.57 (from 65 to 96) GEN = 67.7% (F); 32.3% (M). YE = 13.5 CF = 26.8 | TG = cognitive training (of the 31 RCTs, 14 analyzed general cognitive function, 20 memory, 20 attention, 22 executive function and 6 visuo-spatial capacity) CG = Most were passive control groups, 5 studies with a waiting list and 5 studies with informational talks or some type of education. FORMAT: 13 studies with group interventions and 17 studies with individual interventions FREQUENCY: Session duration approx. 1 h (20 min to 2 h). From 1 to 5 weekly sessions, from 2 to 20 weeks, and from 8 to 60 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Memory Attention Executive function Visuo-spatial capacity | All pre-post 10 follow-ups (2, 3, 4, 6 months, 1 or 2 years depending on the study) | 0.42 General cognitive functioning 0.35 Memory 0.22 Attention 0.42 Executive function 0.18 Visuo-spatial capacity |
Kelly et al., 2014 | Comm. Context 31 RCTs > 10 participants per condition Intervention of cognitive training or general mental stimulation Participants: > 60 years without CI | Total N = 4555 TG = 2192 and CG = 2363 MA = 71.8 (from 60 to 99) GEN = no data YE = no data CF = no data | TG = cognitive training and interventions with mental stimulation CG = Passive and active (DVD or educational lectures, training in health promotion, computer games without mental training, or some type of non-structured learning). FORMAT = 7 studies with group interventions and 24 studies with individual interventions FREQUENCY = Session duration approx. 1 h (30 min to 2 h). From 1 to 5 weekly sessions, from 2 to 24 weeks, and from 8 to 75 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Memory Executive function | All pre-post 16 follow-ups (2, 3, 4, 6, 8 or 9 months, 1, 2, 3 or 5 years depending on the study). | No data available |
Reijnders et al., 2013 | Comm. Context and clinical settings 27 RCTs - 21 Healthy older adults - 6 E. with MCI 8 Clinical Studies Participants: healthy older adults or with MCI Any type of cognitive intervention Subjective and/or objective measures of results | N totalhea = 2520 N totalMCI = 410 TGhealthy = 1499 CGhealthy = 1021 TGMCI = 216 CGMCI = 194 MAhealthy = 71.6 (from 60 to 83) MAMCI = 69.4 (from 60 to 78) GEN = no data YE = no data CF = no data | CT = cognitive interventions (memory, executive function, attention, etc.) CG = 10 studies with healthy participants and 2 with MCI had passive control groups (waiting list) and 11 studies with healthy participants and 4 with MCI had active control groups. FORMAT: Healthy: Group interventions in 10 studies, individual interventions in 10 studies and 1 study used both MCI: Group interventions in 4 studies and individual interventions in 2 studies FREQUENCY: Healthy: Session duration approx. 1 h (30 min to 2 h) From 3 to 180 weeks. MCI: Session duration approx. 1 h (30 min to 2 h) From 5 to 20 weeks. | Healthy/MCI 21/6 RCTs: Memory 8/2 RCTs: Executive function 3/0 RCTs: Intelligence (fluid) 2/0 RCTs: Attention 1/3 RCTs: General cognitive functioning 2/1 RCTs: Functional capacity | All studies are pre-post. Healthy: 5 studies included follow-on data from one year later. MCI: 2 studies included follow-on data from 3-4 months later. | No data available |
Review | Main Charac-Teristics | Participants | Interventions | Skills Measured | Follow-On | Effect Size |
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Smart et al., 2017 | Clinical context 9 RCTs Cognitive interventions participants >60 years old with MCI diagnosis | N total = 676 TG = 378 CG = 298 MA = 70.31 (from 65 to 78) GEN = 72.6% (F); 27.4% (M). YE = no data CF = no data | TG = traditional cognitive training CG = 2 studies with passive control groups (waiting list) and 7 studies with an active control group. FORMAT: All were group interventions except one study with individual training. FREQUENCY: Session duration approx. 1.5 h (45 min to 2.5 h). From 1 to 3 weekly sessions, from 4 to 24 weeks, and from 6 to 72 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Functional capacity | All pre-post 7 short-term follow-ups (2 weeks to 3 months) | 0.38 General cognitive functioning |
Chandler et al., 2016 | Clinical context 24 RCTs Cognitive interventions Participants with MCI | T total N = 1100 C total N = 783 TG = 1100 CG = 783 MA = no data GEN = no data YE = no data CF = no data | TG = 24 Cognitive interventions CG = 14 studies with passive control groups (waiting list) and 10 studies used active control groups. FORMAT: 21 group interventions and 3 studies with individual training. FREQUENCY: Session duration approx. 2 h. From 1 to 3 weekly sessions, from 4 to 48 weeks, and from 4 to 78 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Functional capacity Frame of mind Quality of life | All pre-post 8 studies with therapist-based interventions (from 1 to 28 months) 5 multimodal studies (from 1 to 18 months) | 0.21 General cognitive functioning 0.23 Functional capacity 0.16 Frame of mind 0.10 Quality of life |
Simon et al., 2012 | Clinical context 14 RCTs 6 studies without a control group, of which 1 is a single case study. Cognitive intervention Participants with MCI | Total N = 3575 TG = 580 CG = 2995 MA = no data GEN = no data YE = 11.86 CF = no data | TG = cognitive training (especially in episodic memory) CG = 6 studies without a control group. 11 studies with passive control groups (4 studies with a waiting list) and 3 studies with active control groups: informational talks or some type of education. FORMAT: 10 studies with group interventions and 10 studies with individual interventions FREQUENCY: Session duration approx. 1.5 h (45 min to 2 h). From 1 to 5 weekly sessions, from 2 to 12 weeks, and from 6 to 30 total sessions according to the study. | Memory Functional capacity Frame of mind | All pre-post 10 follow-ups (2, 3, 6 months, 1 or 2 years depending on the study). | No data available |
Gates et al., 2011 | Clinical context 5 RCTs, 2 UCTs (uncontrolled population) 3 NRCTs (non-randomized population) Cognitive intervention Participants with MCI | Total N = 305 TG = 169 CG = 136 MA = 74 (from 62 to 91) GEN = 57.84% (F); 42.16% (M). YE = no data CF = 26.3 | TG = 6 studies with cognitive training (3 RCTs, 2 UCTs, 1 NRCT) and 4 studies with training in memory strategies (2 RCTs, 2 NRCTs). CG = 2 studies without a control group, 5 studies with passive control groups (2 studies with a waiting list) and 3 studies with active control groups FORMAT: 4 studies with group interventions and 2 studies with individual interventions and 4 studies with no information on format FREQUENCY: 1 h session duration (45 min to 2 h). From 1 to 5 weekly sessions, from 3 to 52 weeks, and from 6 to 100 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Memory Attention Executive function Visuo-spatial capacity Functional capacity Frame of mind | All pre-post 4 follow-ups (3, 5 and 6 months depending on the study). | 0.30 Memory |
Stott and Spector 2011 | Comm. Context and clinical settings 3 RCTs, 3 UCTs (uncontrolled population) 2 NRCTs (non-randomized population) Cognitive intervention, cognitive rehabilitation or memory interventions. Participants with MCI | Total N = 280 TG = 172 CG = 108 MA = no data GEN = no data YE = no data CF = no data | TG = 7 studies with cognitive training and 3 studies with cognitive rehabilitation CG = 2 studies without a control group and 8 studies with passive control groups (2 studies with a waiting list) FORMAT: 4 studies with group interventions and 6 studies with individual interventions FREQUENCY: 2 h session duration (45 min to 2 h). From 1 to 5 weekly sessions, from 3 to 12 weeks, and from 3 to 30 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Memory Functional capacity Frame of mind | All pre-post No follow-up data | No data available |
Li et al., 2011 | Clinical context 12 RCTs 8 studies without a control group Stimulation/ Cognitive training or Cognitive Rehabilitation. Participants with MCI | Total N = 690 TG = 444 CG = 246 MA = 73.3 (from 61 to 79) GEN = 54.2% (F); 45.8% (M) YE = 12.9 CF = no data | TG = Cognitive training or Cognitive Rehabilitation. CG = 8 studies without a control group, 7 studies with passive control groups (6 studies with a waiting list) and 5 studies with active control groups FORMAT: 9 studies with group interventions and 11 studies with individual interventions FREQUENCY: Session duration 1.5 h (45 min to 2 h). From 1 to 5 weekly sessions, from 2 to 14 weeks, and from 5 to 103 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Memory Executive function Visuo-spatial capacity Frame of mind | All pre-post No follow-up data | 0.41 General cognitive functioning 0.45 Memory 0.35 Attention 0.27 Executive function 0.43 Visuo-spatial capacity 0.35 Frame of mind 0.27 Functional capacity 0.32 Quality of life |
Review | Main Characteristics | Participants | Interventions | Skills Measured | Follow-On | Effect Size |
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Lobbia et al., 2018 | Clinical context 12 RCTs Dementia diagnosis MMSE score >10 Cognitive stimulation intervention | Total N = 873 TG = 505 CG = 368 MA = 82.3 (from 77 to 88) GEN = 67.5% (F); 32.5% (M). YE = no data CF = no data | TG = Cognitive stimulation CG = 3 studies without a control group, 1 study with passive control group and 8 studies with active control groups: entertainment activities, crafts, music, etc. FORMAT: All interventions were individual. FREQUENCY: From 1 to 2 weekly sessions, from 7 to 14 weeks, and 14 total sessions. | General cognitive functioning Specific cognitive functioning (language, memory, attention, executive function, praxis and orientation) Quality of life Symptoms of depression and anxiety Communication capacity | All pre-post No follow-up data | No data available |
Oltra-Cucarella et al., 2018 | Clinical context 33 RCTs Dementia diagnosis Cognitive intervention | Total N = 1240 TG = 778 CG = 462 MA = 76.16 (from 66 to 87) GEN = 71.4% (F); 38.6% (M). YE = 8.7 CF = no data | TG = 20 studies with cognitive training, 5 with cognitive stimulation, 2 with cognitive rehabilitation and 6 studies that combine cognitive training and cognitive stimulation. CG = 24 studies with a passive control group, 1 study with an active control group (relaxation and psycho-education) and 8 studies without a control group. FORMAT: All are individual interventions. FREQUENCY: From 4 to 60 weeks and from 5 to 120 total sessions according to the study (mean = 32.2 sessions). | General cognitive functioning Memory Attention Executive function Functional capacity Quality of life | All pre-post No follow-up data | No data available |
Kurz et al., 2011 | Adult Daycare Centers (CS) Memory clinics or research centers (CT and CR) 33 RCTs Dementia diagnosis Cognitive intervention | Total N = no data TG = 1945 TG(CS)= 1361 TG(CT/CR) = 584 CG = no data MA = 79.7 GEN = 51% (F); 49% (M). YE = 8 CF = 18.8 | TG = 20 Cognitive stimulation (CS) studies and 13 Cognitive Training (CT) or Cognitive Rehabilitation (CR) studies. CG = 13 studies with a passive control group and 20 with an active control group FORMAT (CS): 9 group interventions and 11 studies with individual training. FREQUENCY (CS): From 4 to 56 weeks and from 6 to 103 total sessions according to the study. FORMAT (CS/CR): 11 group interventions and 3 studies with individual training. FREQUENCY (CS/CR): From 3 to 24 weeks and from 5 to 60 total sessions according to the study. | General cognitive functioning Functional capacity Frame of mind Quality of life | All pre-post 8 follow-ups (from 1 to 10 months) | 0.21 General cognitive functioning |
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Sanjuán, M.; Navarro, E.; Calero, M.D. Effectiveness of Cognitive Interventions in Older Adults: A Review. Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2020, 10, 876-898. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10030063
Sanjuán M, Navarro E, Calero MD. Effectiveness of Cognitive Interventions in Older Adults: A Review. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education. 2020; 10(3):876-898. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10030063
Chicago/Turabian StyleSanjuán, Miriam, Elena Navarro, and M. Dolores Calero. 2020. "Effectiveness of Cognitive Interventions in Older Adults: A Review" European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education 10, no. 3: 876-898. https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe10030063