Home Alone With Dementia

The aim of this qualitative exploratory study was to investigate community care clinicians’ perceptions of the challenges faced by people who have dementia and live alone at home. Data were collected through interviews and focus groups with 21 community health and social care clinicians who supporte...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David Evans, Kay Price, Julienne Meyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-08-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244016664954
id doaj-d58eba84720d4570a66d85f0769c0d63
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d58eba84720d4570a66d85f0769c0d632020-11-25T03:03:22ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402016-08-01610.1177/2158244016664954Home Alone With DementiaDavid Evans0Kay Price1Julienne Meyer2University of South Australia, Adelaide, AustraliaUniversity of South Australia, Adelaide, AustraliaCity University London, UKThe aim of this qualitative exploratory study was to investigate community care clinicians’ perceptions of the challenges faced by people who have dementia and live alone at home. Data were collected through interviews and focus groups with 21 community health and social care clinicians who supported people with dementia in the community. The perceived challenges that were identified related to poor hygiene, inadequate nutrition, keeping safe, other health problems, managing money, coping with technology, and lack of support. Although the findings only represent the perspective of clinicians and so tend to focus on clinical issues, they nonetheless resonate with previous research demonstrating that the issues have persisted for at least two decades. There are a number of implications arising from these perceptions related to a person with dementia’s potential capacity to care for their health, interact safely with other people, and live at home alone. As the severity of cognitive impairment increases, their ability to care for their health and well-being will be compromised. This highlights the importance of community care clinicians being engaged in the early detection of this population and the establishment of supportive routines. These issues will likely to be of international interest, as many countries are facing the challenge of providing community-based care for an increasing number of older people with dementia. However, providing this type of dementia care for people who live alone has received little attention in the literature, and problems remain with meeting the practical challenges faced by this vulnerable population.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244016664954
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Evans
Kay Price
Julienne Meyer
spellingShingle David Evans
Kay Price
Julienne Meyer
Home Alone With Dementia
SAGE Open
author_facet David Evans
Kay Price
Julienne Meyer
author_sort David Evans
title Home Alone With Dementia
title_short Home Alone With Dementia
title_full Home Alone With Dementia
title_fullStr Home Alone With Dementia
title_full_unstemmed Home Alone With Dementia
title_sort home alone with dementia
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2016-08-01
description The aim of this qualitative exploratory study was to investigate community care clinicians’ perceptions of the challenges faced by people who have dementia and live alone at home. Data were collected through interviews and focus groups with 21 community health and social care clinicians who supported people with dementia in the community. The perceived challenges that were identified related to poor hygiene, inadequate nutrition, keeping safe, other health problems, managing money, coping with technology, and lack of support. Although the findings only represent the perspective of clinicians and so tend to focus on clinical issues, they nonetheless resonate with previous research demonstrating that the issues have persisted for at least two decades. There are a number of implications arising from these perceptions related to a person with dementia’s potential capacity to care for their health, interact safely with other people, and live at home alone. As the severity of cognitive impairment increases, their ability to care for their health and well-being will be compromised. This highlights the importance of community care clinicians being engaged in the early detection of this population and the establishment of supportive routines. These issues will likely to be of international interest, as many countries are facing the challenge of providing community-based care for an increasing number of older people with dementia. However, providing this type of dementia care for people who live alone has received little attention in the literature, and problems remain with meeting the practical challenges faced by this vulnerable population.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244016664954
work_keys_str_mv AT davidevans homealonewithdementia
AT kayprice homealonewithdementia
AT juliennemeyer homealonewithdementia
_version_ 1724686006849896448