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Implementing Affordable Virtual Reality Interventions for Older Adults in Latin America: A Feasibility Study
- Ana Trueba, Cristina Crespo-Andrade, Camila A. Merino, Nicolas Agustin Alvarez Frank, Maria Sol Garces, Hailey V. Cray, Rebecca Dickinson, Ipsit V. Vahia
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- Journal:
- International Psychogeriatrics / Volume 35 / Issue S1 / December 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 February 2024, p. 38
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Introduction:
Virtual Reality (VR)-based meditation has shown to help reduce, stress, anxiety, sadness, and anger in younger adults. However, this has not been extensively studied in older adults. Furthermore, there are no standard guidelines on how VR mindfulness interventions should be implemented to ensure successful outcomes in different cultures and languages. The availability of affordable hardware raises the possibility of VR being used in low-income countries. The goal of this study is to describe and highlight some key considerations and challenges when implementing low-cost VR mindfulness interventions with older adults in Quito, Ecuador.
Methods:We created a guided mindfulness intervention using low-cost VR (smartphones and Destek V5 headsets) for older adults with anxiety in Quito, Ecuador. This project is a collaboration between the Technology and Aging Lab at McLean Hospital and the Universidad San Francisco de Quito in Ecuador. Our goal was to recruit 20 older adults with anxiety from various outpatient settings in Quito. We used the free “Sites in VR” app and selected different nature scenes for each intervention. The intervention consists of a total of 10 sessions each lasting 30 minutes. We assessed depression using the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), and anxiety with the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale (GAD-7). In addition, we also administered the Mindfulness Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS) and the Behavior Activation for Depression scale (BADS).
Results:At the time of writing, we have reached 100% of our recruitment goal and anticipate completing data analysis by January 2023. Qualitatively, our intervention revealed barriers to designing scalable VR Spanish language interventions in Latin America. Some of the main difficulties we encountered are described below: (i) There are very few virtual reality videos (360° videos) that are available for use with the DesTeK VS VR Headset in Spanish. We therefore, used a standardized Spanish narration to guide the mindfulness practice based on a script used in the United States. (ii) We found that majority of the available content is not suitable for mindfulness. Using the application Sites in VR remedied this concern, as it provides static 360° images, suitable for mindfulness. (iii) Not all technology necessary for VR interventions is readily available in Latin America: smartphones sold in Latin America do not always have a gyroscope sensor.
Conclusion:Mindfulness interventions using virtual reality may be an effective way to address stress and mood symptoms in older adults across cultures. However, there are many culture-specific aspects that must be addressed before applying these interventions in different cultures. This study, conducted in Latin America, is an initial step toward the establishment of best practices and standardized low-cost VR mindfulness intervention in older adults, and many aspects addressed here may be generalizable to other cultures, settings, and countries.
S11: Digital Health and Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Psychogeriatrics: Opening Multiple Frontiers
- Ipsit Vahia, Ana F. Trueba, Kreshnik Hoti, Bettina Husebø
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- Journal:
- International Psychogeriatrics / Volume 35 / Issue S1 / December 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 February 2024, p. 36
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- Article
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- You have access Access
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Symposium OverviewOverall Abstract:
The past decade has seen an explosion in the growth of technologies in mental health. Particularly, the scaled adoption of virtual care catalyzed by the COVID-19 pandemic has opened up new frontiers in how digital tools can be incorporated into psychiatry. No area of mental health care is as ripe for digital innovation as psychogeriatrics. In this session, an international group of clinicians and researchers will demonstrate how digital health in psychogeriatrics represents multiple cutting edges of innovation.
Our symposium will include 4 presentations, that represent original research from the USA, Ecuador, Norway, Kosovo and Australia. We will highlight clinical applications of these digital tools and aligned issues such as improved care access in low- and middle-income countries, the ethics of digital data collection and the potential for creating new liabilities.
We will focus on four distinct technologies and applications. Dr. Ipsit Vahia will discuss passive environmental sensing supported by signal processing and artificial intelligence (AI) in guiding treatment decision making, especially in dementia care. His presentation will include discussions on how AI can be incorporated into care while also preserving autonomy. Dr. Kreshnik Hoti will discuss the application of AI on voice-based signals to determine changes in pain levels and psychopathology. His presentation will include research conducted in collaboration between teams based in Australia and Kosovo and through a public-private partnership with a digital health startup. Dr. Ana Trueba will focus on digital interventions, specifically virtual reality (VR). She will present data from two studies, one from McLean hospital In the US, and the other from Ecuador that explore how VR can deliver evidence-based non-pharmacologic interventions. Dr. Bettina Husebø will present data from a project she oversees in Norway. Her talk will discuss how care in nursing homes can be improved by incorporating a range of digital approaches into nursing home care paradigms. A particular focus will be on the relationship between pain and behavior symptoms and dementia among nursing home dwelling older adults.
Thus, the symposium will address diagnostics, treatment and systems level care and how New technologies are shaping the evolution of psychogeriatrics worldwide.