1 / 15

The Social Care and Support Needs of Adults with Dementia and Sight Loss

This research explores the social care and support needs of adults with dementia and sight loss. It highlights the challenges they face and offers recommendations for improving their quality of life. The study includes interviews with individuals living with these conditions and practitioners, as well as an examination of available services and aids.

bbauer
Télécharger la présentation

The Social Care and Support Needs of Adults with Dementia and Sight Loss

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Social Care and Support Needs of Adults with Dementia and Sight Loss Karen Croucher, Research Fellow February 2015

  2. About the research • “How can adult social care and support practice best contribute to the provision of high quality, cost effective care and support for people with sight loss and dementia” • Funded by National Institute for Health Research School for Social Care Research • Methods • Qualitative interviews with people living with dementia and sight loss living in different housing settings • Focus groups and interviews with practitioners

  3. Prevalence of dementia and sight loss • 2 million people in the UK living with serious sight loss • 1 in 10 people aged 75+ has a significant visual impairment, rising to 1 in 3 aged 90+  • Over 100,000 people aged 75 + have concurrent dementia and sight loss • Sight loss experienced “differently” depending on cause • Sight loss and dementia experienced “differently” depending on which condition comes first

  4. Living with dementia and sight loss • Care needs exacerbated by having both conditions as well as other co-morbidities • Value placed on independence • Difficulties in “learning” new skills or adapting to change, for example, using assistive aids • Social activities not accessible due to sight loss • Management of finance • Going out problematic • Reassurance and description

  5. Example 1 • “But with Pops you see, his sight, he hasn’t got that visual has he, that visual aid to react to his memory, to kick in that memory….With Dad, even if he had something like a switch on the wall in places like this that told him what day it was, by the time he got to the door he’d’ve forgotten, so that is another difficult thing that, you know, it’s so difficult to actually stimulate the brain and the memory, because of the lack of sight… Because we’ll be asked the same question, 2 minutes later, all through Saturday won’t we?...”

  6. Example 2 “Now, I can listen them [talking books], and mind I fall asleep sometimes, but I can listen to them … if I, if I get really interested in it you start, you know, get going, say [husband] has gone out and I put one in, and I listen, and I get really interested in it, but, then you see, when I knock it off to have a rest from it, I've forgotten what’s there to start with and I've got to think”.

  7. Services for people with dementia and sight loss • Both conditions tend to be under-diagnosed, and there can be additional challenges to diagnosis if someone already has one condition • Current models of care and support tend to focus on dementia and sight loss separately • Low level of professional knowledge about conditions (and services) beyond their expertise • Lack of joint working in some areas • Various aids (often quite simple) and adaptations are used to support independence and promote safety • Lack of joint working across services

  8. Level of care and support services used: • Source: Interviews with people with sight loss and dementia, 2013

  9. Facilitators to meeting needs • Familiarity and consistency: people and place • Living at home • Same staff visiting to provide care • Support from partner • Support from family, friends, neighbours, volunteers • Public environments with convenient transport and accessible toilets facilitate social participation • Supported housing settings particularly for people living alone

  10. Vignettes • What “housing” solution would work best for case studies? • Staying put or moving? Aids, adaptations? • What other services might help them? • Current/most recent extra care scheme – how would this work for the people described here? • Design, care, support, social activities? • Do you know what is available locally to support people with dementia and sight loss?

  11. Recommendations (1) • Timely diagnosis for both conditions • Assessment drawing on expertise of dementia and sensory impairment practitioners • Aim to preserve independence where possible and practical • Information and support – on-going as needs change • Regular, dementia-friendly eye examinations • Simple strategies in response to sight problems: improved lighting, the “right” glasses

  12. Recommendations (2) • Better joint working and skills sharing • Practical assistance by familiar staff • Variety of options to meet carers’ preferences for support • More social and cognitive stimulation and enjoyable activities that are accessible to people with dementia and sight loss • Aids and environmental adaptation introduced early to embed in daily routines – and kept simple where possible

  13. Project Team • Karen Croucher and Mark Bevan, CHP • Julie Barrett, Housing and Dementia Research Consortium • Sarah Buchanan, Thomas Pocklington Trust • Anna Clarke, University of Cambridge • Simon Evans and Jennifer Bray, University of Worcester • Anthea Innes, Samuel Nyman, and Michelle Heward, Bournemouth University

  14. Disclaimer • This presentation reports independent research commissioned and funded by the Department of Health’s National Institute for Health Research School for Social Care Research. • The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NIHR School for Social Care Research, or the Department of Health, NIHR, or NHS

  15. Thanks for listening • Karen.Croucher@york.ac.uk • https://www.york.ac.uk/chp/

More Related