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Formal Care Providers' Perceptions of Home- and Community-Based Services: Informing Dementia Care Quality
- Source :
- Nursing Publications
- Publication Year :
- 2009
- Publisher :
- Informa UK Limited, 2009.
-
Abstract
- Little attention has been given to the perceptions of formal care providers on the nature and quality of home- and community-based dementia care. The purpose of this descriptive interpretive research was to explore formal care providers' perceptions of their experiences with Canadian home- and community-based dementia care. Participants within three personal interviews and six focus groups (n = 41) included nurses, social workers, therapists, home care aides, and Alzheimer Society personnel (front line/management) in rural and urban areas of Saskatchewan (n = 16), Manitoba (n = 20), and Ontario (n = 8). Two overarching thematic categories, Service Availability and Service Acceptability, emerged from the data analysis. Subthemes of availability were identified as: (a) challenges of service availability, including service wait lists, lack of home care provider training, lack of community-based dementia care infrastructure, and sociocultural and geographic barriers to accessing dementia services; and (b) essential facilitators of availability, including service infrastructure, service bridging, and agency partnerships to form coordinated care systems. Subthemes of acceptability were revealed as: (a) essential components of dementia care, including provision of comprehensive personal care and the use of dementia care professional practice knowledge within a home care setting; and (b) service challenges, including inadequate service time for the physical care and socioemotional support of the client and family caregiver, caregiver and formal provider difficulty with navigation of a fragmented care system, lack of system coordination, and financial costs of services. Essential, integrated dementia care could be established by listening to the "voices of formal care providers," thereby decreasing dementia care costs and increasing the quality of life for those with dementia, and their family caregivers.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Time Factors
Dementia care
Attitude of Health Personnel
Nursing Methodology Research
Nursing
Health Services Accessibility
Social support
Surveys and Questionnaires
medicine
Humans
Perceptions
Dementia
Community Health Services
Formal care providers
Qualitative Research
Quality of Health Care
Ontario
Community and Home Care
Service (business)
Personal care
Social work
Family caregivers
business.industry
Health Policy
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Social Support
Manitoba
Focus Groups
Middle Aged
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
medicine.disease
Home Care Services
Focus group
Saskatchewan
Female
business
Needs Assessment
Qualitative research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15450856 and 01621424
- Volume :
- 28
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Home Health Care Services Quarterly
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5aad8fde3da184d4f68b748588686f6e
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01621420802700952