Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name YOROZUYA Kyosuke
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code R000020986
researchmap agency Bukkyo University

Title

Investigating the effects of reminiscence using smells on loneliness and depressive symptoms in community‐dwelling older adults: a randomised controlled trial

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Hideaki Hanaoka
Mariko Yamamoto
Yoshihito Tsubouchi
Kyosuke Yorozuya
Kotaro Tsuda
Koji Kumota
Yuta Kubo
Daiki Nakashima
Toshiaki Muraki
Miwako Tsunematsu
Fumiko Kaneko
Mineko Wada
Hitoshi Okamura

OwnerRoles

 

Summary

Abstract

 Background

 The use of a variety of sensory elements is recommended when implementing reminiscence therapy. However, there is a lack of evidence supporting this recommendation. This study aimed to examine the benefits of using smell as a memory trigger during reminiscence therapy for community‐dwelling older adults, focusing on its effects on loneliness and depressive symptoms.

 Methods

 Seventy‐nine community‐dwelling older adults were randomly allocated to either an intervention or a control group. Participants in the intervention group underwent a total of eight 40‐min. reminiscence therapy sessions once a week that used smell as a trigger. The control group underwent similar reminiscence therapy but only used themed conversations. Their responses were assessed pre‐ and post‐intervention using the UCLA Loneliness Scale version 3 (UCLA LS3), which evaluates loneliness, and the Geriatric Depression Scale‐15‐Japanese, which measures the state of depressive symptoms.

 Results

 The pre‐intervention comparison of the participants' characteristics and each evaluation item showed significant differences ( P  = 0.030) between the two groups' olfactory visual analogue scale (VAS) scores. Subsequently, we performed analysis of covariance via repeated measurements, using olfactory VAS as the covariate, and found significant interactions in UCLA LS3 ( P  = 0.006) alone. To identify items for consideration during interventions, we examined factors related to post‐intervention UCLA LS3 scores. Our results showed that the notion of usefulness, by which participants perceived the smell triggers to be useful for inducing reminiscence ( P  = 0.045), was significantly related to pre‐intervention UCLA LS3 scores ( P  < 0.001) in the intervention group. 

 Conclusion

 These findings show that using smell as a trigger during reminiscence therapy can effectively alleviate loneliness and suggest the need to prepare appropriate odorants for facilitating reminiscence.

Magazine(name)

Psychogeriatrics

Publisher

Wiley

Volume

25

Number Of Pages

4

StartingPage

 

EndingPage

 

Date of Issue

2025-05-27

Referee

Exist

Invited

 

Language

 

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

International Journal

 

International Collaboration

 

ISSN

 

eISSN

 

ISBN

 

DOI

10.1111/psyg.70037

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Cinii Books Id

 

PMID

 

PMCID

 

Format

Download

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID

 

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Major Achivement

Other