9 results on '"Harding, Emma"'
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2. Situating support for people living with rarer forms of dementia
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Sullivan, Mary Pat, Camic, Paul M., Harding, Emma, Stott, Joshua, Windle, Gill, Brotherhood, Emilie V., Grillo, Adetola, and Crutch, Sebastian J.
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- 2023
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3. 'Communication is difficult': Speech, language and communication needs of people with young onset or rarer forms of non‐language led dementia.
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Volkmer, Anna, Cross, Lisa, Highton, Lily, Jackson, Connie, Smith, Chloe, Brotherhood, Emilie, Harding, Emma V., Mummery, Cath, Rohrer, Jonathan, Weil, Rimona, Yong, Keir, Crutch, Sebastian, and Hardy, Chris J. D.
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FAMILIES & psychology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,HEALTH services accessibility ,LEWY body dementia ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,QUALITATIVE research ,FRONTOTEMPORAL dementia ,INTERVIEWING ,SPOUSES ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CEREBRAL cortex ,COMMUNICATIVE disorders ,FAMILY attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,LANGUAGE disorders ,QUALITY of life ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SPEECH therapy ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,SOCIAL isolation ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: People with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, posterior cortical atrophy and young onset Alzheimer's disease may experience language and communication difficulties. However, the role of speech and language interventions for people with these non‐language led dementias has received little attention. Aims: This study aimed to explore the experiences and perspectives of people living with these conditions, and their families, regarding their language and communication difficulties and how speech and language therapy could address these needs. Methods: This study employed a qualitative design to explore the experiences of people living with or caring for somebody with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, posterior cortical atrophy or young onset Alzheimer's disease, and to understand their opinions about speech and language therapy. Participants were recruited from a support service connected to a dementia clinic to attend one of five focus group meetings. Videorecorded focus groups and interviews were transcribed, and reflexive thematic analysis was used to analyse data from people affected by each type of dementia. Results: A total of 25 participants were recruited to the study, with representation across the different forms of non‐language led dementias. The four main themes identified were: (1) communication difficulties as a key difficulty, (2) loss and loneliness, (3) speech and language therapy, and (4) the role of the caregiver. Sixteen subthemes were also identified which highlighted individual issues across disease types. Discussion: Although all the forms of dementia studied here are not considered to be language‐led, people with these conditions and/or their care partners identified speech, language and communication as common challenges. These communication difficulties were reported to have a negative impact on their social participation and mental health and participants felt speech and language interventions could help. There is a need for research exploring speech and language interventions developed for and with people with non‐language led dementias and their care partners, to ensure they meet the needs of the people they are designed for. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS: What is already known on the subject: People with primary progressive aphasia present with speech, language and communication difficulties, and several speech and language interventions have been developed to meet the needs of this population. However, people with non‐language led dementias may also experience speech, language and communication difficulties, and little is known about interventions that may address these difficulties. What this paper adds to existing knowledge: People living with or caring for somebody with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, posterior cortical atrophy and young onset Alzheimer's disease report experiencing speech, language and communication difficulties that impact on the person with dementia's social participation and mood. Participants in this study also shared their opinions about how speech and language interventions could help, from the earliest stages of the disease. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work?: Speech and language therapists need to address the individual speech, language and communication needs of people with dementias, even those that are not thought to be language‐led. Current speech and language therapy service provision does not meet the needs of people with non‐language led dementias and further research is required to develop interventions and services to meet these needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. A mixed methods evaluation of a program exploring predeath grief and loss for carers of people with rarer dementias.
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Stevens-Neck, Rosie, Walton, Jill, Alterkawi, Shaima, Brotherhood, Emilie V., Camic, Paul M., Crutch, Sebastian J., Gerritzen, Esther V., Harding, Emma, McKee-Jackson, Roberta, Rossi-Harries, Samuel, Street, Rebecca E., van der Byl Williams, Millie, Waddington, Claire, Wood, Olivia, and Moore, Kirsten J.
- Abstract
Objectives: Predeath grief conceptualizes complex feelings of loss experienced for someone who is still living and is linked to poor emotional well-being. The Road Less Travelled program aimed to help carers of people with rarer dementias identify and process predeath grief. This study evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of this program. Design: Pre–post interventional mixed methods study. Setting: Online videoconference group program for carers across the UK held in 2021. Participants: Nine family carers of someone living with a rare form of dementia. Eight were female and one male (mean age 58) with two facilitators. Intervention: The Road Less Travelled is an online, facilitated, group-based program that aims to help carers of people with rarer dementias to explore and accept feelings of grief and loss. It involved six fortnightly 2-hour sessions. Measurements: We collected measures for a range of well-being outcomes at baseline (T1), post-intervention (T2), and 3 months post-intervention (T3). We conducted interviews with participants and facilitators at T2. Results: Participant attendance was 98% across all sessions. Findings from the semistructured interviews supported the acceptability of the program and identified improvements in carer well-being. Trends in the outcome measures suggested an improvement in quality of life and a reduction in depression. Conclusion: The program was feasible to conduct and acceptable to participants. Qualitative reports and high attendance suggest perceived benefits to carers, including increased acceptance of grief, and support the need for a larger-scale pilot study to determine effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. 'Misdiagnosed and Misunderstood': Insights into Rarer Forms of Dementia through a Stepwise Approach to Co-Constructed Research Poetry.
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Camic, Paul M., Sullivan, Mary Pat, Harding, Emma, Gould, Martha, Wilson, Lawrence, Rossi-Harries, Sam, Grillo, Adetola, McKee-Jackson, Roberta, Cox, Susan M., Stott, Joshua, Brotherhood, Emilie V., Windle, Gill, and Crutch, Sebastian J.
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DIAGNOSIS of dementia ,TREATMENT of dementia ,EMPATHY ,RESEARCH methodology ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,FAMILY support ,INTERVIEWING ,DEMENTIA patients ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,CRITICAL thinking ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DEMENTIA ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,POETRY (Literary form) ,PATIENT-professional relations ,THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
This study investigated co-constructed research poetry as a way to understand the lived experiences of people affected by rarer dementia and as a means to use poetry to convey those experiences to healthcare professionals. Using mixed methods, 71 people living with rarer dementia and care-partners (stakeholders) contributed to co-constructing 27 poems with professional poets; stakeholders' verbatim words were analysed with descriptive qualitative analysis. Stakeholders were also surveyed and interviewed about their participation. Healthcare professionals (n = 93) were surveyed to elicit their responses to learning through poetry and its acceptability as a learning tool. Poems conveyed a shared narrative of different aspects of lived experience, often owing to atypical symptoms, misunderstandings by professionals, lack of support pathways, and a continuous struggle to adapt. Stakeholder surveys indicated it was a valuable experience to both co-create and respond to the poems, whilst group interviews revealed people's experiences of the research poetry were characterised by reflection on lived experience, curiosity and exploration. Healthcare professionals' responses reinforced poetry's capacity to stimulate cognitive and affective learning specific to rare dementia support and prompt both empathy and critical thinking in practice. As the largest poetry-based study that we are aware of, this novel accessible approach of creating group poems yielded substantial information about the experiences and needs of those affected by rarer dementia and how poetry can contribute to healthcare education and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. DATA SET for: 'Misdiagnosed and misunderstood'- Poetry as a co-created research methodology across geographical boundaries for rarer dementias: The electronic poems
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Camic, Paul M, Sullivan, Mary Pat, Harding, Emma, Grillo, Adetola, Stott, Josh, Windle, Gill, Brotherhood, Emilie, Gould, Martha, Wilson, Lawrence, and Crutch, Sebastian
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poets ,caregivers ,young onset dementia ,arts-based methodology ,virtual environments ,arts & health ,carers ,non-memory led dementias ,qualitative research - Abstract
This data set contains 27 completed poems from 71 participants (9 cohort groups), explanations of the poets’ creative process, and source material (original words) from people living with rare dementia and carers who responded to a series of three prompts over a 12 week period. Data was collected between 2021-2022 as part of the Electronic Poems Project within the Rare Dementia Support Impact Study. Study Abstract Purpose: Poetry can convey sensory and emotional information and is a way to understand complex phenomena. This study explored the development of a new co-created form of poetic inquiry to further comprehend the lived experiences of people affected by 6 rarer dementias. These include young onset, inherited and non-memory-led conditions that are often misunderstood and subsequently lack care and support. Methods: Three prompts over about 12 weeks were sent electronically to 71 international participants to solicit responses, which were thematically analysed, creating 27 group poems. Follow-up surveys using content analysis assessed participant experiences producing and responding to the poems. Results: Analysis resulted in 3 - 4 themes per prompt, conveying very difficult aspects of lived experience, often owing to atypical symptoms, younger onset, misunderstandings by professionals and others, lack of support pathways, tremendous future uncertainty and a continuous struggle to adapt. Survey results found 74% had a positive experience contributing to the poems whilst 84% responded positively to the completed poems. Conclusions: As one of the largest empirical poetry-based studies that we are aware of, this novel, accessible approach of co-creating group poems yielded support for poetry as an arts-based qualitative research methodology that was able to gather substantial in-depth information about the experiences and needs of those affected by rarer dementias. Survey responses provided additional significant support for this methodological approach. Future research is suggested. Funding:The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work is part of the Rare Dementia Support Impact Project (The impact of multicomponent support groups for those living with rare dementias, (ES/S010467/1)) and is funded jointly by Economic and Social Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation, and the National Institute for Health Research (UK). The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the ESRC, UKRI, the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. Rare Dementia Support is generously supported by the National Brain Appeal https://www.nationalbrainappeal.org/). Lead investigator S. J. Crutch and co-investigators: J. Stott, P. M. Camic, G. Windle, R. Tudor-Edwards, Z. Hoare, M.P. Sullivan and R. McKee-Jackson.
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- 2023
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7. Talking Lines: A Research Protocol Integrating Verbal and Visual Narratives to Understand the Experiences of People Affected by Rarer Forms of Dementia.
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Camic, Paul M., Rossi-Harries, Sam, Harding, Emma, Harrison, Charles R., Sullivan, Mary Pat, Grillo, Adetola, Brotherhood, Emilie V., and Crutch, Sebastian J.
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RESEARCH protocols ,DEMENTIA ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,QUALITY of life ,CAREGIVERS - Abstract
People affected by rarer forms of dementia often have a long and difficult experience obtaining a diagnosis and appropriate support, impacting family, employment and social relationships, quality of life and wellbeing. For this population progressive cognitive symptoms affect skills other than memory and disproportionately occur under the age of 65 years, often resulting in misdiagnosis and lack of appropriate care pathways. The objective of this study will be to better understand the subjective experience of the time period from first noticing symptoms to obtaining a formal diagnosis, through to accessing support, and onward to the present time. Through the concurrent use of line drawings and video-recorded interviews we will collect the stories of people living with different rarer dementias and/or family members who are care partners in Canada and the United Kingdom. Narrative and visual analysis will be used in parallel to methodologically explore how line drawing and verbal discourse interact and inform each other to construct knowledge, and how the use of drawing lines might enrich research interviews and increase accessibility of research participation. This novel research approach may also have implications for clinical interviewing, support services, and public engagement. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to retrospectively explore over time the experiences of people affected by rarer forms of dementia from initial symptoms—to diagnosis—to accessing support—to the present, using visual and verbal methodologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Developing Poetry as a Research Methodology with Rarer Forms of Dementia: Four Research Protocols.
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Camic, Paul M., Harding, Emma, Sullivan, Mary Pat, Grillo, Adetola, McKee-Jackson, Roberta, Wilson, Lawrence, Zimmermann, Nikki, Brotherhood, Emilie V., and Crutch, Sebastian J.
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RESEARCH protocols , *VASCULAR dementia , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *DEMENTIA , *RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
People living with rarer forms of dementia tend to have progressive cognitive symptoms affecting skills other than memory and/or onset before the age of 65 years. They are often misdiagnosed and due to symptom profile or age of onset, do not usually fit well with care pathways designed for older people with typical Alzheimer's disease or vascular dementia. Although the arts have been increasingly used as interventions to support people with dementia, there is very little attention given to rarer dementia forms in arts and health research or practice. The objective of the present international study seeks to systematically explore four diverse forms of poetry writing within this population through virtual and in-person small and large group formats. Our approach includes investigating poetic processes as methodology through the lens of an arts-based methodological approach in order to explore how poems construct knowledge and a felt experience. We will also use more traditional qualitative approaches to understand the experience of writing, reading and listening to poetry as an intervention that can be used with different rarer forms of dementia. To the best of our knowledge, this will be the first study to explore poetry using multiple research protocols. The results will have implications for methodology development, co-constructed poetic inquiry and multiple opportunities for involving poetry in supporting people with dementia and family members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. A mixed methods evaluation of a program exploring predeath grief and loss for carers of people with rarer dementias – CORRIGENDUM.
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Stevens-Neck, Rosie, Walton, Jill, Alterkawi, Shaima, Brotherhood, Emilie V., Camic, Paul M., Crutch, Sebastian J., Gerritzen, Esther V., Harding, Emma, McKee-Jackson, Roberta, Rossi-Harries, Samuel, Street, Rebecca E., van der Byl Williams, Millie, Waddington, Claire, Wood, Olivia, and Moore, Kirsten J.
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This document is a correction notice for an article titled "A mixed methods evaluation of a program exploring predeath grief and loss for carers of people with rarer dementias." The correction addresses an error in the affiliation of several authors. The correct affiliation for these authors is the Dementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, UK. The original article has been updated to reflect this correction. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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