Exploring experiential differences in everyday activities – A focused ethnographic study in the homes of people living with memory-led Alzheimer's disease and posterior cortical atrophy

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Emma Harding , Mary Pat Sullivan , Paul M. Camic , Keir X.X. Yong , Joshua Stott , Sebastian J. Crutch
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Supporting ageing in place, quality of life and activity engagement are public health priorities for people living with dementia, but little is known about the needs and experiences of community-dwelling people with rarer forms of dementia with lesser known symptoms. Posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) is a rare form of dementia usually caused by Alzheimer's disease but which is characterised by diminished visual processing (rather than a dominant memory problem), which poses challenges for maintaining independence and accessing appropriate support.

Methods

This study used a comparative qualitative design and focussed ethnographic methods to explore experiential differences in activity engagement for 10 people with the most common, memory-led presentation of Alzheimer's disease and 10 people with posterior cortical atrophy within their everyday home environments.

Results

While the data collection revealed much rich variation in individual and contextual factors, some tentative high-level differences in the experiences of everyday activities could be drawn out, seemingly attributable to the different diagnoses' differing dominant symptoms. These included people with posterior cortical atrophy being less likely to use environmental cues to initiate activities, and more likely to withhold from asking for support because of preserved insight into the impact of this on carers. This lack of initiation of activities could be misinterpreted as apathy. People with posterior cortical atrophy also were discouraged from engaging in activities by disorientation within the home, and difficulties localising, identifying and manipulating objects. People with the more common, memory-led presentation of Alzheimer's disease exhibited more memory-based difficulties with engaging with activities such as forgetting planned activities, where to locate the items required for an activity and the steps involved. Despite these distinct symptom-led challenges, all participants and their family members demonstrated resourcefulness and resilience in making creative adaptations to support continued engagement in everyday activities, supporting the widely reported management strategies of people with dementia of the Alzheimer's type more generally.

Conclusions

These findings offer helpful insights into some the differing impacts dementia related visual and memory impairments can have on everyday activity engagement, which will be helpful for others navigating these challenges and the health and social care practitioners working with people affected by these conditions. The findings also highlight the vast individual variation in the multitude of individual and contextual factors involved in everyday activity engagement, and suggest important areas for future work utilising methods which are similarly high in ecological validity and accessibility as the home-based focussed ethnographic methods utilised here.

探索日常活动中的体验差异--在记忆主导型阿尔茨海默病和后皮质萎缩患者家中进行的重点人种学研究
背景支持居家养老、提高生活质量和参与活动是痴呆症患者的公共卫生优先事项,但人们对症状较罕见的社区痴呆症患者的需求和经历知之甚少。后皮质萎缩(PCA)是一种罕见的痴呆症,通常由阿尔茨海默氏症引起,但其特点是视觉处理能力减弱(而不是主要的记忆问题),这给保持独立性和获得适当的支持带来了挑战。方法本研究采用比较定性设计和重点人种学方法,探讨 10 名最常见的、以记忆为主要表现形式的阿尔茨海默病患者和 10 名后皮质萎缩患者在日常家居环境中参与活动的体验差异。其中包括后皮质萎缩患者不太可能利用环境线索来启动活动,也更有可能拒绝寻求支持,因为他们不了解这样做对照顾者的影响。这种缺乏主动活动的情况可能会被误解为冷漠。后皮质萎缩患者也会因为在家中迷失方向,以及难以定位、识别和操作物品而不愿意参与活动。更常见的、以记忆为主导的阿尔茨海默氏症患者在参与活动时表现出更多基于记忆的困难,例如忘记计划的活动、忘记在哪里找到活动所需的物品以及活动的步骤。尽管存在这些不同的症状挑战,但所有参与者及其家人都表现出了机智和韧性,他们创造性地进行了调整,以支持继续参与日常活动,这与广泛报道的阿尔茨海默型痴呆症患者的管理策略相吻合。结论这些研究结果有助于深入了解与痴呆症相关的视觉和记忆障碍对参与日常活动可能产生的不同影响,这将有助于其他人应对这些挑战,也有助于为受这些疾病影响的患者提供服务的医疗和社会护理从业人员。研究结果还强调了参与日常活动所涉及的众多个人因素和环境因素中存在的巨大个体差异,并提出了未来工作的重要领域,即采用与本文所采用的以家庭为中心的人种学方法同样具有高度生态有效性和可及性的方法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
17.40%
发文量
70
审稿时长
50 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Aging Studies features scholarly papers offering new interpretations that challenge existing theory and empirical work. Articles need not deal with the field of aging as a whole, but with any defensibly relevant topic pertinent to the aging experience and related to the broad concerns and subject matter of the social and behavioral sciences and the humanities. The journal emphasizes innovations and critique - new directions in general - regardless of theoretical or methodological orientation or academic discipline. Critical, empirical, or theoretical contributions are welcome.
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