scholarly journals DEVELOPING INCLUSIVE CARE HOME ENVIRONMENTS FOR OLDER LGBT PEOPLE: A PILOT SCHEME IN ENGLAND

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 626-626
Author(s):  
P. Willis ◽  
T. Hafford-Letchfield ◽  
K. Almack ◽  
P. Simpson
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
Michelle Heward ◽  
Amanda Adams ◽  
Ben Hicks ◽  
Jan Wiener

Abstract Living with dementia can adversely affect people's spatial (orientation and navigation) and reality (time, date and place) orientation, which can detrimentally impact on their sense of social inclusion and wellbeing. This is an important challenge to address within United Kingdom (UK) care homes where around 70 per cent of the residents are living with dementia or severe memory problems. Care home managers have some autonomy in decision-making that impacts on the daily functioning of residents and are key in enacting the orientation and navigation agenda within a care home environment. Yet a paucity of literature explores their understanding and experiences of this issue. Contributing to this knowledge gap, our exploratory study examined managers’ current practice of supporting residents with dementia to minimise disorientation and their knowledge of dementia-friendly design principles, guidelines and audit tools. Semi-structured telephone interviews with 12 UK care home managers were conducted. Questions started generally targeting residents’ orientation and navigation abilities, followed by specific questions to draw out strategies used to support residents. Thematic analysis identified three higher-order themes: aligning strategies with needs, intuitive learning and managing within the wider business context. The findings demonstrated that managers perceive dementia to impact on a person's spatial and reality orientation. Consequently, the strategies they chose to adopt were tailored towards alleviating both challenges. However, although managers were aware of some design principles, they frequently relied on intuitive learning and past experiences to inform their choice of interventions, reporting a lack of knowledge and/or time to seek out orientation-specific training and guidance, resulting in a low uptake of guidelines and audit tools in practice. This gap between theory and practice highlights a need for accessible guidelines that integrate strategies with neuropsychological theory, and appropriate training to improve orientation and navigation in care home environments. Managers, staff, business owners, architects and designers all play a key role in implementing orientation guidelines into practice and ensuring dementia-friendly care home environments for residents.


Physiotherapy ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (6) ◽  
pp. 334-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Ward ◽  
M Severs ◽  
T Dean ◽  
N Brooks

2002 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-42
Author(s):  
Derek Ward ◽  
Martin Severs ◽  
Taraneh Dean

The emergence of the intermediate care agenda has added momentum to the debate on the use of alternative care settings for the delivery of rehabilitative interventions for older persons. This paper reports on the findings of the first stage of a research programme to investigate the extent of the use of care home environments for the rehabilitation of older people in England. Stage two of the project will explore in more depth the characteristics of the rehabilitation provision identified in stage one.


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