MassaChusetts General Hospital ROybal CeNter For BehavIoral Dyadic ResEarch in Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias (CONFIDE-ADRD)

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P30 · $1,203,241 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY (OVERALL): The scientific theme of the “MassaChusetts General Hospital ROybal CeNter For BehavIoral Dyadic ResEarch in Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias” (CONFIDE-ADRD) is the development, optimization, testing and implementation of dyadic behavioral prevention interventions (DBPIs) across the spectrum of ADRD in both hospital and community settings, to improve health and prevent negative individual and dyadic health outcomes. ADRDs (herein called dementias) are progressive, debilitating, and terminal illnesses associated with progressive negative health outcomes. Dementia drastically alters the lives of both the person diagnosed and their informal care-partner (spouses, children, other family, friends), and often disrupts established roles, identities, relationships, and future plans. Most dementia interventions focus on patients or care-partners alone, without accounting for their interrelation and interpersonal processes. The few existing dyadic behavioral interventions are limited because: 1) they often lack dyadic theoretical foundation and conceptual framework; 2) they are not mapped onto the NIH stage model; 3) they do not use principles of the Science of Behavior Change (SOBC) to inform dyadic mechanisms of change and appropriate measurement; 4) they are not developed across the spectrum of primary, secondary or tertiary prevention; 5) they do not incorporate the NIA Health Disparities Framework to provide a mechanistic understanding of health disparities and levels of analyses relevant to dyadic research; and 6) they do not account for dyadic interdependence and interpersonal relationships to maximize potency and avoid negative effects for one of the partners. CONFIDE-ADRD will address these limitations and catalyze the development of interdisciplinary research to create, test and implement innovative and rigorous DBPIs mapped onto our novel conceptual model that incorporates the NIH Stage Model, SOBC, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention model, the NIA Health Disparities Framework and dyadic theory. CONFIDE-ADRD will: 1) develop a diverse, next generation of scientists committed to dementia DBPIs; 2) use an experiential learning approach to dementia DBPI research that prioritizes mechanisms of behavior change; 3) will swiftly move DBPIs across the NIH Stage Model for effective and efficient implementation. Our three overarching aims will be met by the Center’s two cores. The Administrative Core will: 1) coordinate the Center’s activities, promote interactions and networking among pilot awardees, co-investigators and collaborating partners; 2) integrate with local and national centers, institutes and organizational partners; 3) use experiential learning activities (e.g., DBPI Salon, grant writing workshops, mock grant reviews) to provide hands on learning of relevant DBPI research aspects. The Behavioral Intervention Development Core will provide awardees with support and practical experience in working w...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10874322
Project number
1P30AG086562-01
Recipient
MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Principal Investigator
Olivia Ifeoma Okereke
Activity code
P30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$1,203,241
Award type
1
Project period
2024-08-15 → 2026-05-31