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A suite of evaluation resources for Dementia Friendly Communities: Development and guidance for use

Authors :
Stefanie Buckner
Louise Lafortune
Nicole Darlington
Angela Dickinson
Anne Killett
Elspeth Mathie
Andrea Mayrhofer
Michael Woodward
Claire Goodman
Buckner, Stefanie [0000-0001-6820-7057]
Darlington, Nicole [0000-0002-2505-1256]
Mathie, Elspeth [0000-0002-5871-436X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Dementia. 21:2381-2401
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2022.

Abstract

Peer reviewed: True<br />Funder: National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration East of England (ARC EoE)<br />OBJECTIVES: In the context of a growing number of dementia friendly communities (DFCs) globally, a need remains for robust evaluation, and for tools to capture relevant evidence. This paper reports the development of a suite of evaluation resources for DFCs through a national study in England. METHODS: Fieldwork took place in six diverse case study sites across England. A mixed methods design was adopted that entailed documentary analysis, focus groups, interviews, observations, and a survey. Participants were people affected by dementia and practice-based stakeholders. A national stakeholder workshop was held to obtain input beyond the research sites. A workshop at the end of the study served to check the resonance of the findings and emerging outputs with stakeholders from the case study DFCs. RESULTS: The study had three key outputs for the evaluation of DFCs: First, an evaluation framework that highlights thematic areas to be considered in evaluating DFCs. Second, a Theory of Change that presents inputs into a DFC and short, medium and longer term outcomes. Third, a matrix for assessing a DFC's degree of maturity, which enables a sense of the kinds of outcomes a DFC might realistically aspire to. These three outputs form a suite of interlinking and complementary evaluation resources for DFCs. CONCLUSIONS: The study has contributed evidence-based resources for monitoring and evaluation that complement existing frameworks. They can be applied to arrive at a detailed assessment of how well a DFC works for people affected by dementia, and at insights into the underlying factors that can guide future policy and practice.

Details

ISSN :
17412684 and 14713012
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Dementia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....25a35d6d10eb8f8e4aabc50b658b501e