Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
| NCT number |
NCT01782157 |
| Other study ID # |
R01EB015853-01A1 |
| Secondary ID |
R01EB015853-01A1 |
| Status |
Completed |
| Phase |
|
| First received |
|
| Last updated |
|
| Start date |
January 2013 |
| Est. completion date |
December 2018 |
Study information
| Verified date |
April 2023 |
| Source |
Washington State University |
| Contact |
n/a |
| Is FDA regulated |
No |
| Health authority |
|
| Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The world's population is aging and the resulting prevalence of chronic illnesses is a
challenge that our society must address. The vision is to address this challenge by designing
smart environment technologies that keep older adults functioning independently in their own
homes as long as possible. Smart environments have been used as the basis of monitoring
activities for residents with health conditions. However, there is currently a lack of large
scale, longitudinal research to identify early markers of dementia and other health status
changes and to predict functional decline. The objective of this project is to perform a
5-year longitudinal study of older adults performing daily activities in their own smart
homes.
Description:
By tracking residents' daily behavior over a long period of time our intelligent software can
perform automated functional assessment and identify trends that are indicators of acute
health changes and slower progressive decline (e.g., dementia). By implementing prompt-based
interventions that support functional independence and promote healthy lifestyle behaviors
(e.g., social contact, exercise, regular sleep), the investigators can improve overall health
and well-being. The investigators hypothesize that smart home technologies can be used to
detect and predict functional change, to slow functional change and extend functional
independence, and to improve quality of life in elderly individuals who are at risk of
transitioning to mild cognitive impairment and to dementia. This hypothesis has been
formulated on the basis of preliminary data produced by the applicants which supports the
efficacy of using smart home technologies for both functional status assessment and for
prompting the initiation and completion of activities in individuals with mild cognitive
impairment and dementia. The rationale of the proposed work is that understanding the natural
history of functional change between aging and dementia will lead to early prevention and
proactive interventions that will slow functional change, thereby delaying nursing home
placement and cost of care to society. The investigators plan to pursue the following
specific aims: (1) Characterize the daily lifestyle of smart environment residents through
minimal-supervision activity recognition and activity discovery, (2) Design software
algorithms that detect trends in behavioral data, and (3) Evaluate the efficacy of
activity-aware automated prompting technology for extending functional independence and
improving quality of life. The proposed work is innovative because it will track a large
number of individuals longitudinal in their own homes and determine whether this technology
can be used to promote healthy lifestyle behaviors and detect health care changes that may
lead to early interventions, improved quality of life, and decreased health care utilization.
The project is significant because it will introduce new technologies for activity discovery
and tracking that require minimal-supervision, contribute algorithms that predict cognitive
decline and signal more acute health status change, and demonstrate for the first time that
activity-aware automated prompting technologies can be used to support and/or slow functional
change and to increase quality of life in elderly individuals.