Cochrane Summariesbeta

Independent high-quality evidence for health care decision making

No new evidence of the efficacy of validation therapy for people with dementia or cognitive impairment has been identified. The new study identified Schrijnemaekers 2002 was excluded because it was not deemed to be validation therapy.

Neal M, Barton Wright P
Published Online: 
January 21, 2009

Validation therapy is based on the general principle of validation, the acceptance of the reality and personal truth of another's experience. The specific interventions and techniques used within the validation approach bring together behavioural and psychotherapeutic methods to meet the needs of individuals with different stages of dementia. Three studies were identified that met the inclusion criteria. It was not possible to pool the data from the 3 included studies, either because of the different lengths of treatment or choice of different control treatments, or because the outcome measures were not comparable. Two significant results were found but there were no statistically significant differences between validation and social contact or between validation and usual therapy. There were no assessments of carers. All in all there is insufficient evidence from randomised trials to allow any conclusion about the efficacy of validation therapy for people with dementia or cognitive impairment.

Find the research