MAINTAIN Intervention
Cross-source consensus on MAINTAIN Intervention from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Dosage & preparation
Preparation
Background
Highlighted claims
- MAINTAIN is a personalised, multidisciplinary, home-based rehabilitation programme addressing physical and psychosocial needs after a fall in people with dementia. — Feasibility of the MAINTAIN intervention to support independence after a fall for people with dementia: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial in participants’ own homes
- The maximum dose of MAINTAIN is 22 sessions over 28 weeks, comprising up to 19 therapy sessions over 12 weeks plus three booster sessions. — Feasibility of the MAINTAIN intervention to support independence after a fall for people with dementia: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial in participants’ own homes
- The first MAINTAIN session focused on collaborative goal setting involving therapists, the person with dementia, and the unpaid carer. — Feasibility of the MAINTAIN intervention to support independence after a fall for people with dementia: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial in participants’ own homes
- MAINTAIN therapist training covered dementia awareness, communication, person-centred care, risk reduction, pain management, and SMART goal setting using Goal Attainment Scaling. — Feasibility of the MAINTAIN intervention to support independence after a fall for people with dementia: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial in participants’ own homes
- MAINTAIN therapy activities include strength and balance training, dual-task exercises, and functional tasks embedded into daily routines. — Feasibility of the MAINTAIN intervention to support independence after a fall for people with dementia: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial in participants’ own homes
- MAINTAIN was developed as a refined version of the earlier Developing an Intervention for Fall-Related Injuries in Dementia programme. — Feasibility of the MAINTAIN intervention to support independence after a fall for people with dementia: a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial in participants’ own homes