# A new psychosocial goal-setting and manualised support intervention for independence in dementia (NIDUS-Family): longer-term outcomes of a randomised controlled trial

**Authors:** Melisa Yilmaz, Victoria Vickerstaff, Jessica Budgett, Julie A. Barber, Claudia Cooper

PMC · DOI: 10.1192/bjo.2025.10940 · 2026-01-08

## TL;DR

A new dementia care intervention called NIDUS-Family helps families achieve personal goals for care recipients with dementia over two years.

## Contribution

NIDUS-Family is a manualized psychosocial intervention that improves goal attainment in dementia care dyads over 24 months.

## Key findings

- NIDUS-Family improved goal attainment scaling scores at 18 and 24 months compared to control.
- Most baseline goals remained relevant to carers at 18 and 24 months.
- Secondary outcomes like care home admission and death did not show significant differences.

## Abstract

The new psychosocial goal-setting and manualised support intervention for independence in dementia (NIDUS-Family) is a manualised dementia care intervention.

To evaluate whether goal-setting plus NIDUS-Family is more effective than the control condition (goal-setting and routine care) in supporting dyads’ (family carers and care recipients with dementia) attainment of personalised goals; and to determine participant-perceived goal relevance over 24 months.

We randomised dyads from community settings (2:1): to NIDUS-Family, a manualised psychological intervention tailored to goals that dyads set by selecting modules, delivered in 6–8 video call/telephone sessions over 6 months then 2–3 follow-ups monthly for 6 months; or to control. Outcomes were goal attainment scaling (GAS) (primary) at 18 and 24 months, functioning, quality of life, time until care home admission or death, carer anxiety and depression. Primary analysis, a mixed-effects model, accounted for randomisation group, study site, time, intervention arm facilitator and repeated measurements.

In the period 2020–2021, 204 participants were randomised to intervention and 98 to control; 164 (54.3%) and 141 (46.7%) dyads completed 18- and 24-month outcomes, respectively.

In the primary analysis, including 277 participants contributing 6-, 12-, 18- or 24-month outcomes, adjusted GAS mean differences (intervention–control) at 18 and 24 months were 11.78 (95% CI 6.64, 16.93) and 8.67 (95% CI 3.31, 14.02), respectively. Secondary outcome comparisons were not significant. The hazard ratio for dying or care home admission was 0.80 (95% CI 0.45, 1.42; intervention versus control), and 0.87 (95% CI 0.41, 1.82) and 0.59 (95% CI 0.26, 1.33) for death and care home admission, respectively. Among baseline GAS goals, carers considered 436 (78.0%) relevant at 18 months and 383 (78.5%) at 24 months.

NIDUS-Family improved attainment of GAS goals over 2 years.

ISRCTN11425138.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** death (MESH:D003643), anxiety (MESH:D001007), dementia (MESH:D003704), depression (MESH:D003866)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12835691/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12835691