The APPLE Tree programme: Active Prevention in People at risk of dementia through Lifestyle, bEhaviour change and Technology to build REsiliEnce

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Division of Psychiatry

Abstract

We plan to make and test a prevention programme to lower older people's chances of getting dementia. The half of older people (aged 60+) who have problems with "cognition" (memory, orientation and other thinking) have more chance of getting dementia, so we will design an approach that works for them.

We will design our programme with people who will use, run and pay for it, and will think especially about how it will work for people from more deprived and minority ethnic groups, who are more likely to get dementia.

Our programme will help older people make changes that can prevent dementia. These are:

1. Being more socially and mentally active
2. Eating more healthily
3. Being more physically active
4. Looking after their mental and physical health
5. Stopping smoking
6. Reducing alcohol.

We will learn from therapies that have worked, but are too time consuming and expensive to run outside of research studies.

What we will find out
Stream 1: What do people with memory problems, including those from minority ethnic or more deprived backgrounds, do now to try to avoid dementia?

Stream 2: Do people with a higher chance of getting dementia get the right help from their GPs (such as blood pressure checks) to prevent it? What makes this more and less likely?

Stream 3: What should our face to face, personalised programme be like?
Which "app" design will work best in helping prevent dementia? Do people with memory problems, including people from vulnerable groups, use it?

Stream 4: How do people who will use, run and pay for our programme if it works, think it should be designed and used?

Stream 5: Do people who take part in our programme have less cognitive problems over two years than people who only receive an information leaflet?
If so, how did it work, and is it good value for money?

How we will do it
We will review past research and interview around 80 older people, their families and professionals, to find out how the NHS and society help older people live healthier lives to prevent dementia. We will look at how people think about memory problems and preventing dementia. We will use a database with 14 million UK primary care records, to see who is getting health care that can prevent dementia.

We will work with Age-UK, the Alzheimer's society, Care organisations, local authorities and Public Health England.

We will randomly allocate 704 people with memory problems without dementia, so they have an equal chance of receiving the new programme or an information leaflet.

We plan that the programme will be 10 group sessions over 6 months. We will offer individual sessions for people who cannot come to groups. Two facilitators will lead the groups. They will be trained and supervised by an experienced psychologist to keep to a manual so the programme is delivered in the same way each time. Groups will take place in a range of places to be accessible to all. We will ask people taking part to complete questionnaires, including a memory test and give a voluntary blood sample, before the programme starts and 6 and 24 months later. We will interview around 50 people taking part (including those who drop out) or running the groups to hear what went well and what could be better.

As more care and therapies move online, we risk leaving vulnerable people behind. We will ask engineers to design an easy to use app to support people to make the lifestyle changes that prevent dementia. We will support them to build it, then try it out with study participants, including people from vulnerable groups (we can lend them computers if they don't have their own and are willing). We can look at how this helps to get the new programme to people who need it most in future work.

Our programme could make a huge difference to individuals, the NHS and society, by reducing the number of people who get dementia.

Planned Impact

The programme will benefit
i) People with Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD) and Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) (corresponding to half of those aged 60+) and their families. We will develop an intervention to reduce cognitive decline; and increase the proportion of older people at increased dementia risk who are aware and can access dementia prevention. This will reduce current inequities in timely diagnosis.
ii) Those implementing and commissioning health policy and care.
iii) Academia, building dementia academic capacity and increasing knowledge.


How we will ensure people with SCD/MCI benefit:

People at risk of dementia are the primary intended beneficiaries of the knowledge, intervention and implementation plans we will generate. We will work closely with those at risk of dementia and embed PPI throughout. We have engaged people with SCD/MCI in focus groups (NHS memory service, Single Homeless Project), and consulted family carers of people with dementia, to inform this proposal. Age UK and the Alzheimer's Society will work with us.

Short-term: participants will benefit from involvement, especially if the intervention is effective. We will collaborate with our community partners and PPI group to design a high impact, Knowledge Exchange Events programme. We will raise awareness about dementia prevention and disseminate findings through national media. In 2016, Brainfood, one of the pilot interventions that will inform the new intervention was featured on BBC London news.

Medium and long-term: we plan to slow cognitive decline and prevent dementia. The programme has significant potential for societal and economic impact: it could reduce health and social care service use and mitigate the devastating effects of dementia. The risk factors we are targeting are those the 2017 Lancet Commission identified that, if reduced by a tenth, could prevent a million cases of dementia worldwide. The Lancet commission activities will be a vehicle for international dissemination and impact.


Public health and policy impact:

Outputs would include:
1. A potentially successful dementia prevention intervention,
2. New understandings of social inequities and causal risk mechanisms; and
3. Innovative and cost effective strategies to engage marginalised groups in prevention.

We engaged with third sector, private, public and NHS stakeholders to develop this proposal and build links to ensure our project is multidisciplinary and multi-stakeholder. Public Health England (Alessi, preventable dementia lead and Rashbrook, National Lead for Older People), will advise (without cost) on implementation. We (Cooper/ Betz) recently presented the Brainfood intervention at a Foodmatterslive symposium at London ExceL; and the Cavendish Square Group, a collaboration of London's ten NHS mental health services, include it as a good practice case study on their website. The level of interest in the Brainfood pilot demonstrates a clear need for a lifestyle-focussed, dementia prevention programme; and the potential impact of a programme that is inclusive and has a robust evidence-base.
International Longevity Centre (ILC-UK) will write a policy report and publicise it to politicians, policy-makers, voluntary sector and industry. Stakeholders (NHS, Public Health England, Age UK, Alzheimer's Society, Jewish Care, Camden adult social care and Islington public health) and ILC-UK will raise awareness and deliver policy and practice changes at local, national and global levels. We will achieve impact through publications and conferences.


Academic capacity:

We will support future dementia leaders to develop independent research portfolios. Our plans include a lectureship, post-doctoral fellowship, 3 PhD studentships and introduce a cohort of engineers to social sciences and applied dementia research. We are international and multi-disciplinary: our programme builds innovative, boundary-crossing collaborations

Publications

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Title APPLE-Tree photographic exhibition: 'Reimagination' 
Description New photography exhibition highlights experiences of people living with memory problems during and beyond the pandemic Some of the participants have worked with professional photographer Sukey Parnell Johnson to make and curate a public exhibition of photographs. This was launched on 8.9.22 at The Wellcome collection by Dr David Grant (PhD, MBE) and Carry Grant (MBE). Dame Caroline Dinenage (MP) and Daisy Cooper (MP) and the Alzheimer's Society ambassador Supported the exhibition. It was held in the Frank and Steel Room, Wellcome Collection Eustone from 2pm-7pm on Wednesday 8th September. 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2022 
Impact The exhibition moved to the Uppoer Waiting Hall at Houses of Parliament, then on to Holy Sepulchre Church in London. 
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRmF99h4L9Y
 
Description We have completed the first phase of our work, a large qualitative study of the views of a range of people about how active dementia prevention should happen in practice. We have also reviewed the literature for previous studies that have tried to reduce cognitive decline in people aged 60+ to inform our new intervention. We have coproduced the APPLE-Tree intervention. We worked with our PPI coproduction group to adapt it to remote delivery. We completed a pilot of the APPLE-Tree video-call intervention (july-Sept 2020) - this has been submitted for publication. We adapted our trial to be carried out remotely. We have just started delivering it.
Exploitation Route Other students at UCL are building on the findings of the APPLE-Tree qualitative work. Our PhD students are planning to conduct secondary analyses.
Sectors Healthcare

 
Description We have now completed baseline recruitment (n-748) to main trial. We have completed an add-on Visual ethnography project to co-design an exhibition.
First Year Of Impact 2023
Sector Healthcare,Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Description Keynote talk at conference, Tokyo Metropolitan University, covered in National newspaper Asashi shinbun 21.12.19 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Keynote talk on dementia prevention at conference convened at Tokyo Metropolitan University
covered in National newspaper Asashi shinbun 21.12.19
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019