血管性认知障碍:当记忆丧失不是最大的挑战时。

Dementia (London, England) Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-11-24 DOI:10.1177/14713012231214299
Sara Aj van de Schraaf, Merel F Smit, Majon Muller, Cees Mpm Hertogh, Hanneke Fm Rhodius-Meester, Eefje M Sizoo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:血管性认知障碍是第二常见的认知障碍类型。社区居住的血管性认知障碍患者及其照顾者的护理需求尚未得到充分的研究。因此,我们旨在探讨血管性认知障碍患者及其家庭照顾者的护理需求。设计:定性访谈研究。环境和参与者:参与者是有目的地抽样社区居住的血管性认知障碍患者及其家庭照顾者。方法:对访谈进行录音并逐字记录。分析和数据收集遵循一个迭代过程,直到达到数据饱和。我们进行了18次访谈(9名血管性认知障碍患者和9名护理人员),涉及13名独特的血管性认知障碍患者。我们采用Braun & Clark方法对数据进行归纳主题分析。本研究按照COREQ标准进行报告。研究结果:血管性认知障碍患者和家庭照顾者报告的护理需求中确定了五个主题:(1)子主题的特定信息需求(1A)没有记忆问题,没有痴呆?(2)作为一个人被尊重,(3)对未来的不同关注,(4)照顾者的角色和(5)专业医疗保健的决定性。结论和意义:血管性认知障碍患者及其照顾者的护理需求受到(缺乏知识的)这种疾病的特征性症状的影响。参与者将认知障碍或痴呆等同于记忆丧失(“阿尔茨海默病”),尽管记忆丧失并不是他们最大的挑战。血管性认知障碍患者和护理人员首选果断果断的医疗保健专业人员。这些专业人员激活了缺乏主动性的血管性认知障碍患者,并减少了照顾者的角色冲突。对血管性认知障碍患者及其护理人员的护理可以通过提供量身定制的信息,提高对神经精神症状(特别是冷漠)的认识,以及医疗保健专业人员在决策方面提供更多指导来改善。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vascular cognitive impairment: When memory loss is not the biggest challenge.

Objectives: Vascular cognitive impairment is the second most common type of cognitive impairment. Care needs of community-dwelling people with vascular cognitive impairment and their caregivers have not been thoroughly studied. Therefore, we aimed to explore care needs of people with vascular cognitive impairment and their family caregivers.

Design: A qualitative interview study.

Setting and participants: Participants were purposefully sampled community-dwelling people with vascular cognitive impairment and their family caregivers.

Methods: Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Analysis and data collection followed an iterative process, until data saturation was achieved. We conducted 18 interviews (nine people with vascular cognitive impairment and nine caregivers), concerning 13 unique people with vascular cognitive impairment. We analyzed the data using inductive thematic analysis following the Braun & Clark method. The study was reported in accordance with the COREQ criteria.

Findings: Five themes were identified in the care needs reported by people with vascular cognitive impairment and family caregivers: (1) Specific information need with subtheme (1A) No memory problem, no dementia? (2) Being respected as a person, (3) Differing concerns about the future, (4) The roles of the caregiver and (5) Decisiveness from professional healthcare.

Conclusions and implications: The care needs of people with vascular cognitive impairment and their caregivers were affected by (a lack of knowledge about) the characteristic symptoms of this condition. Participants equated cognitive impairment or dementia to memory loss ("Alzheimerization"), although memory loss was not their biggest challenge. People with vascular cognitive impairment and caregivers preferred resolute and decisive healthcare professionals. These professionals activate the person with vascular cognitive impairment who lacks initiative and diminishe role conflict of the caregiver. Care for people with vascular cognitive impairment and their caregivers could be improved by providing tailored information, promoting awareness of neuropsychiatric symptoms, particularly apathy, and by healthcare professionals providing more guidance in decision-making.

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