Mild Cognitive Impairment Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparative Effectiveness of Behavioral Interventions to Prevent or Delay Dementia (CEBIPODD)
This study will compare the effectiveness of different combinations of 5 types of behavioral interventions across patient-centered outcomes. It will also evaluate which outcomes (e.g. quality of life, cognition, function, mood) matter most to people at risk for dementia and their care partners. The results of this study have the potential to direct patients, families, and health care providers as to which combinations of behavioral interventions provide the greatest potential impact on which dementia prevention outcomes. Greater use of behavioral strategies that are targeted to the outcomes of most important to the patient will likely improve patient compliance and treatment adherence. This, in turn, can lessen the need for medication, health care, and long term care utilization.
Traditional randomized controlled trials (RCTs) can be thought of as 'additive' trials where randomization leads to the addition of treatments beyond placebo. Participants are confronted with the probability of receiving placebo (no treatment). This leads many potential participants to not consent or to withdraw if they believe they are receiving no treatment. In contrast, the proposed trial will be 'subtractive'. This innovative approach to randomization will involve suppression of just 1 of the 5 treatment components. Thus, all participants will receive at least 80% of the menu of interventions offered in this trial. ;
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