17 results on '"Depla MFIA"'
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2. 'Keuze, noodzaak, comfort-model':Beslissen over doorbehandelen na een ernstige beroerte
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Sizoo, EM, Visser, MC, and Depla, MFIA
- Published
- 2020
3. Feasibility of a geriatric multidisciplinary outpatient rehabilitation program-lessons learned
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Mak, RG, de Groot, AJ, Vreeburg, Ellen M., Smalbrugge, M, Depla, MFIA, General practice, and EMGO - Quality of care
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- 2016
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4. Disentangling the concept of 'the complex older patient' in general practice: a qualitative study: Bmc Family Practice
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Zwijsen, S. A., Nieuwenhuizen, N. M., Maarsingh, O. R., Depla, Mfia, Hertogh, Cmpm, General practice, and EMGO - Quality of care
- Abstract
Background: The rising life expectancy in the developed world leads to an increase in the number of older patients and the complexity of their complaints in general practice. Although interventions and support for general practitioners are available, implementation lags. Knowledge on what determines a complex older patient, the problems of which general practitioners encounter and the situations they actually need support for, is necessary for better implementation. Methods: To provide support to general practitioners in their struggle with complex older patients, the aim of this research was to disentangle the concept of the complex older patient in general practice. A qualitative approach was used consisting of 15 semi-structured interviews with general practitioners. The general practitioner was asked to prepare a case of a complex older patient out of their own practice that could be discussed during the interview. Transcripts of the interview were analysed using inductive thematic analysis. Results: Analysis of the interviews resulted in twelve themes that could be categorised into five factors that contribute to the complexity of cases of older patients. The five factors are: not being in charge, different views on necessary care, encountering the boundaries of medicine, limits to providing social care, ill-equipped. Conclusion: The factors that were found imply that a better organisational structure for elderly care and consulting elderly care physicians could support general practitioners in providing care for older complex patients. Furthermore, understanding the current concept of patient autonomy seems unjustified in cases of complex older patients.
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- 2016
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5. Community integration of elderly mentally ill persons in psychiatric hospitals and two types of residences
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Depla, MFIA, de Graff, R, van Busschbach, JT, and Heeren, TJ
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QUALITY-OF-LIFE ,PEOPLE ,CARE ,NURSING-HOMES - Abstract
Objective: Deinstitutionalization policy in the Netherlands has given rise to two new living arrangements for elderly long-term psychiatric patients. Both involve accommodation in mainstream residential homes for elderly persons, either concentrated in a specialized care unit or dispersed throughout the facility. The authors studied the effectiveness of these two housing models for the community integration of such residents compared with accommodation in a psychiatric hospital. Methods: Three subsamples were selected: 49 residents in six units of concentrated housing, 47 residents in 12 units of dispersed housing, and 78 patients in 24 psychiatric hospital units, for a total sample of 174 participants. These samples were compared in a quasi-experimental, posttest-only design that used four measures of community integration: amount of perceived influence over one's daily life, involvement in social activities, social network size, and frequency of visits received from members of the network. To adjust for differences in the populations, the hospital patients were matched to the residential home residents, and confounding factors were controlled for. Results: Residential homes afforded more privacy, were closer to public services, and had a more diversified population than psychiatric hospitals. Participants in dispersed housing experienced more personal influence over their lives than did hospital patients. Concentrated-housing participants were less enterprising and had smaller social networks. The three groups did not differ in the frequency of visits received from network members. Conclusions: Community-integrated facilities do not necessarily imply community-integrated residents. Only dispersed-housing residences were an improvement over hospitals, and then solely in terms of residents' influence over their own daily lives. The advantage of the dispersed-housing model is that it resembles independent living while its institutional nature offers structure and protection.
- Published
- 2003
6. Care for vulnerable older persons. Need, utilization and appropriateness
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van der Ploeg, E.S., Mackenbach, Johan, Nijpels, G, Depla, MFIA, Public Health, Mackenbach, J.P., Nijpels, M.G.A.A.M., Depla, M.F., van Hout, H.P.J., EMGO+ - Quality of Care, Nijpels, Giel, van Hout, Hein, and EMGO - Quality of care
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- 2009
7. Advance Care Planning in Huntington Disease: The Elderly Care Physician's Perspective.
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Ekkel MR, Depla MFIA, Sakhizadah Z, Verschuur EML, Veenhuizen RB, Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD, and Hertogh CMPM
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- Humans, Nursing Homes, Physician-Patient Relations, Huntington Disease therapy, Advance Care Planning, Physicians
- Abstract
Objective: Huntington disease (HD) has a poor prognosis. Decision-making capacity and communication ability may become impaired as the disease progresses. Therefore, HD patients are encouraged to engage in advance care planning (ACP). Elderly care physicians (ECPs) can play an important role in ACP in HD patients. However, little is known about their experiences in this role. The aim of this study is to gain insight into how ECPs practice ACP with HD patients., Design: A qualitative interview study., Setting and Participants: Nine ECPs working in HD-specialized nursing homes in the Netherlands., Methods: We conducted semistructured interviews with ECPs between June 2018 and July 2020., Results: Two phases could be identified in the process of ACP. In the first phase, when the feared future seems to be far away, the ECP asks about the patient's wishes for the future in an accommodating manner. In the second phase, when the feared future is closer, future medical treatment and care becomes less hypothetical. Agreement has to be reached on upcoming treatment decisions. In this phase, the ECP takes a more guiding role, and consequently encounters more difficulties, such as maintaining a positive patient/family-physician relationship while dealing with disagreements with patient or family. Most participants shared their experiences with euthanasia when asked about ACP. When making a comparison of ACP between HD patients and patients with other neurodegenerative disorders in nursing homes, the ECPs emphasized the similarities., Conclusions and Implications: ACP in HD can be classified into 2 phases, which differ in ECPs' approach and the complexity experienced by the ECP. Awareness of this finding may help to further develop training and education in ACP, including dealing with euthanasia, to make ECPs feel better equipped in practicing ACP in HD., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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8. Nursing home residents with Huntington's disease: Heterogeneity in characteristics and functioning.
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Ekkel MR, Veenhuizen RB, van Loon AM, Depla MFIA, Verschuur EML, Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD, and Hertogh CMPM
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- Male, Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Activities of Daily Living, Cross-Sectional Studies, Nursing Homes, Cognition, Huntington Disease psychology, Huntington Disease therapy
- Abstract
Background: In Huntington's disease (HD), admission to a nursing home (NH) is required in advanced disease stages. To gain insight in care needs, more knowledge is needed on the functioning of this group., Objective: Describing patient and disease characteristics, their functioning, and gender differences., Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive design was used to collect data of 173 patients living in eight Dutch HD-specialized NHs. Data were collected on characteristics and functioning. We tested for gender differences., Results: Mean age was 58.3 years and 49.7% were men. Activities of daily living and cognition varied from 46 to 49% mildly impaired to 22-23% severely impaired. Communication was severely impaired in 24%. Social functioning was low in 31% and high in 34%. A majority of patients used psychotropic medications (80.3%) and showed neuropsychiatric signs (74%). Women were on average more dependent in ADL (severely impaired 33.3% vs 12.8%), more often depressed (26.4% vs 11.6%), and prescribed antidepressant medications more often (64.4% vs 48.8%) than men., Conclusions: The population of HD patients in NHs is heterogeneous in terms of patient and disease characteristics, and functioning. As a consequence, care needs are complex leading to implications for the required expertise of staff to provide adequate care and treatment., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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9. The Disability Paradox? Trajectories of Well-Being in Older Adults With Functional Decline.
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van Loon AM, Depla MFIA, Hertogh CMPM, Huisman M, and Kok AAL
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- Male, Humans, Female, Aged, Longitudinal Studies, Latent Class Analysis, Aging, Personal Satisfaction
- Abstract
Objectives: The 'disability paradox' (DP) suggests that most older adults maintain subjective well-being (SWB) despite functional decline. However, this may depend the SWB component: positive affect (PA), negative/depressed affect (NA/DA) or life satisfaction (LS). We assessed trajectories of these components in older adults with substantial functional decline. Methods: Data originated from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam ( N = 2545) observed during 1992-2008. Using latent class growth analysis, we distinguished a group with substantial functional decline and examined their SWB trajectories and individual characteristics. Results: The DP occurred more frequently for DA (Men:73%, Women:77%) and LS (Men:14%, Women:83%) than for PA (Men:26%, Women:17%). Higher perceived control (mastery) emerged as the most consistent factor associated with higher odds of the DP. Discussion: We provide a nuanced view of the DP, shifting the question from whether it exists to for which dimension of SWB and for whom it is more or less apparent.
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- 2023
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10. Patient perspectives on advance euthanasia directives in Huntington's disease. A qualitative interview study.
- Author
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Ekkel MR, Depla MFIA, Verschuur EML, Veenhuizen RB, Hertogh CMPM, and Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD
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- Advance Directives, Attitude, Humans, Qualitative Research, Euthanasia, Huntington Disease
- Abstract
Background: Huntington's disease (HD) has a poor prognosis. For HD patients in the Netherlands, one way of dealing with their poor prognosis is by drawing up an advance euthanasia directive (AED). Little is known about the perspectives of HD patients on their AED., Aim: To gain insight into patients' views on and attitudes towards their AED, and changes over time., Methods: A longitudinal qualitative interview study using 1 to 6 semi-structured interviews over a period of maximum three years. Nine HD patients (5 outpatient clinic, 3 day care, 1 assisted living facility) who either had an AED or were thinking about drawing it up participated in this study., Results: We identified two themes that characterize patients' perspectives on their AEDs: (1) general character of the AED; (2) uncertainty around their AED. Ad (1) The conditions that the participants described in their AED were generally not very specific for the person. Mostly they were general notions of unbearable suffering. Familiarity with HD in the family could play a role in drawing up an AED. Ad (2) Participants generally were aware of the tentative character of their AED and could have doubts concerning their own willingness or the willingness of others in the future. Sometimes these doubts were so great, that it prevented them from drawing up an AED. However, patients did not alter their AED during the follow-up period or changed in their view or attitude on their AED., Conclusion: HD patients that draw up an AED usually describe general conditions for euthanasia and recognize that these conditions may change as the disease progresses. An AED or the wish to draw one up may be a good conversation starter for conversations about goals and preferences for future care., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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11. Family caregivers' perspectives on their interaction and relationship with people living with dementia in a nursing home: a qualitative study.
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van Corven CTM, Bielderman A, Lucassen PLBJ, Verbeek H, Lesman-Leegte I, Depla MFIA, Stoop A, Graff MJL, and Gerritsen DL
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- Caregivers, Communicable Disease Control, Humans, Nursing Homes, Qualitative Research, COVID-19, Dementia epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Social interactions are important for people living with dementia in a nursing home. However, not much is known about interactions and relationships between residents and family caregivers and related experiences of family caregivers. We aim to advance the knowledge on how family caregivers interact with people living with dementia in a nursing home and how they maintain or redesign a meaningful connection., Methods: Qualitative research using interviews with family caregivers (n = 31) to explore perspectives on their interaction and relationship with the person living with dementia. Interviews were held during the reopening of nursing homes after the first COVID-19 lockdown in the Netherlands. In this situation, family caregivers became more aware of their interaction and relationship with the resident, which provided a unique opportunity to reflect on this. The interviews explored the interaction and relationship in a broad sense, not specifically for the COVID-19 situation. Thematic analysis was performed to analyze the data., Results: We were able to identify three key themes reflecting the experiences of family caregivers: (1) changes in the interaction and relationship, (2) strategies to promote connection, and (3) appreciation of the interaction and relationship. From the viewpoint of family caregivers, the interaction and relationship are important for both the resident living with dementia and for themselves, and family caregivers have different strategies for establishing a meaningful connection. Nevertheless, some appear to experience difficulties with constructing such a connection with the resident., Conclusions: Our results provide a basis for supporting family caregivers in perceiving and establishing mutuality and reciprocity so that they can experience togetherness., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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12. Association Between Subjective Remaining Life Expectancy and Advance Care Planning in Older Adults: A Cross-Sectional Study.
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Fleuren N, Depla MFIA, Pasman HRW, Janssen DJA, Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD, Hertogh CMPM, and Huisman M
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Netherlands epidemiology, Advance Care Planning, Life Expectancy
- Abstract
Context: Advance care planning (ACP) becomes more relevant with deteriorating health or increasing age. People might be more inclined to engage in ACP as they feel that they are approaching end of life. The perception of approaching end of life could be quantified as subjective remaining life expectancy (SRLE)., Objectives: First, to describe the prevalence of ACP with health care providers or written directives ("formal engagement in ACP") and ACP with loved-ones ("informal engagement in ACP") among older persons in the general population in The Netherlands. Second, to assess the association between SRLE and engagement in ACP., Methods: Cross-sectional study using data from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) measurement wave of 2015-2016. Participants (n = 1585) were aged ≥ 57 years., Results: Median age was 69.4 years (IQR: 64.1-76.7), and median SRLE 25.9 years (17.7-36.0). Formal engagement in ACP was present in 32.6%, informal without formal engagement in 45.8%, and 21.6% was not engaged in ACP. For respondents with SRLE < 25 years, there was a nonstatistically significant association between SRLE and engagement in ACP (aOR: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.93-1.01; P= .088), and a statistically significant, small association with formal vs. informal engagement in ACP (aOR: 0.96; 0.93-0.99; P= .009). For respondents with SRLE ≥ 25 years there was no association between SRLE and engagement in ACP., Conclusion: The perception of approaching end of life is associated with higher prevalence of formal engagement in ACP, but only for those with SRLE < 25 years. For clinicians, asking patients after their SRLE might serve as a starting point to explore readiness for ACP., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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13. Gaining insight into the views of outpatients with Huntington's disease regarding their future and the way they deal with their poor prognosis: a qualitative study.
- Author
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Ekkel MR, Depla MFIA, Verschuur EML, Veenhuizen RB, Hertogh CMPM, and Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Ambulatory Care, Assisted Living Facilities, Day Care, Medical, Euthanasia, Active, Voluntary, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Motivation, Netherlands, Nursing Homes, Qualitative Research, Advance Care Planning, Attitude to Health, Goals, Huntington Disease
- Abstract
Background: Huntington's disease (HD) has a poor prognosis. Decision-making capacity and communication ability may become lost as the disease progresses. Therefore, HD patients are encouraged to engage in advance care planning (ACP). To improve ACP for HD patients, there is a need to better understand how these patients face their poor prognosis., Aim: To gain insight into the views of HD patients who receive outpatient care regarding their future and the way they deal with the poor prognosis of their disease., Methods: A qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 12 patients with HD (7 outpatient clinic, 3 day care, 2 assisted living facility). Audio-recorded interviews were transcribed verbatim. Through reading and re-reading interviews, writing memos and discussions in the research team, strategies were identified., Results: Three strategies emerged for facing a future with HD. Participants saw the future: 1) as a period that you have to prepare for; 2) as a period that you would rather not think about; 3) as a period that you do not have to worry about yet. Participants could adopt more than one strategy at a time. Even though participants realized that they would deteriorate and would need more care in the future, they tried to keep this knowledge 'at a distance', with the motivation of keeping daily life as manageable as possible., Conclusions: Official ACP guidelines recommend discussing goals and preferences for future treatment and care, but patients tend to want to live in the present. Further research is needed to elucidate the best approach to deal with this discrepancy.
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- 2021
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14. Between Choice, Necessity, and Comfort: Deciding on Tube Feeding in the Acute Phase After a Severe Stroke.
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Frey I, De Boer ME, Dronkert L, Pols AJ, Visser MC, Hertogh CMPM, and Depla MFIA
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- Anthropology, Cultural, Decision Making, Humans, Netherlands, Enteral Nutrition, Stroke
- Abstract
This is an ethnographic study of decision-making concerning tube feeding in the acute phase after a severe stroke. It is based on 6 months of ethnographic research in three stroke units in the Netherlands, where the decision-making on life-sustaining treatment was studied in 16 cases of severe stroke patients. Data were collected through participant observation and interviews. For this article, the analysis was narrowed down to the decision whether or not the patient should receive tube feeding. The data on tube feeding were assembled and coded according to different modes of dealing with this decision in clinical practice, which we refer to as "repertoires." We discerned three different repertoires: choice, necessity, and comfort. Each repertoire structures clinical practice differently: It implies distinctive ethical imperatives, central concerns, sources of information, and temporalities. We hope our findings can improve decision-making by uncovering its underlying logics in clinical practice.
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- 2020
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15. Underlying goals of advance care planning (ACP): a qualitative analysis of the literature.
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Fleuren N, Depla MFIA, Janssen DJA, Huisman M, and Hertogh CMPM
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- Humans, Netherlands, Advance Care Planning, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Goals
- Abstract
Background: Since the introduction of the concept of advance care planning (ACP), many studies have been conducted exploring beneficial effects. These studies show a heterogeneity in clinical endpoints, which reflects diversity of goals connected to ACP. This study aims to get insight in the range of underlying goals that comprise the legitimacy of ACP., Methods: Systematic literature search in PubMed, EMBASE, PsychInfo, CINAHL and Cochrane Library. Articles on normative aspects of ACP were included, based on title and abstract. Due to the quantity of inclusions, of which many had similar content, purposive sampling was used to select articles for full text document analysis. Analysis stopped once saturation was reached., Results: In total, 6497 unique articles were found of which 183 were included. Saturation was reached after document analysis of 55 articles (30%); this yielded 141 codes concerning goals of ACP and also 70 codes about objections against ACP, which shed light on the underlying goals of ACP as well. We identified five underlying goals: respecting individual patient autonomy, improving quality of care, strengthening relationships, preparing for end-of-life, reducing overtreatment., Conclusions: Five distinctive underlying goals of ACP were identified, each with corresponding objections that need to be considered. Specifying underlying goals of ACP may direct the debate on definitions, methods and preferred outcomes of ACP. This study was funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development, grant 839120002.
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- 2020
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16. Pressure in dealing with requests for euthanasia or assisted suicide. Experiences of general practitioners .
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de Boer ME, Depla MFIA, den Breejen M, Slottje P, Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD, and Hertogh CMPM
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- Humans, Interviews as Topic, Netherlands, Qualitative Research, Decision Making, Euthanasia ethics, General Practitioners psychology, Professional-Family Relations ethics, Stress, Psychological, Suicide, Assisted ethics
- Abstract
The majority of Dutch physicians feel pressure when dealing with a request for euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide (EAS). This study aimed to explore the content of this pressure as experienced by general practitioners (GP). We conducted semistructured in-depth interviews with 15 Dutch GPs, focusing on actual cases. The interviews were transcribed and analysed with use of the framework method. Six categories of pressure GPs experienced in dealing with EAS requests were revealed: (1) emotional blackmail, (2) control and direction by others, (3) doubts about fulfilling the criteria, (4) counterpressure by patient's relatives, (5) time pressure around referred patients and (6) organisational pressure. We conclude that the pressure can be attributable to the patient-physician relationship and/or the relationship between the physician and the patient's relative(s), the inherent complexity of the decision itself and the circumstances under which the decision has to be made. To prevent physicians to cross their personal boundaries in dealing with EAS request all these different sources of pressure will have to be taken into account., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2019
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17. Involuntary care - capturing the experience of people with dementia in nursing homes. A concept mapping study.
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de Boer ME, Depla MFIA, Frederiks BJM, Negenman AA, Habraken JM, van Randeraad-van der Zee CH, Embregts PJCM, and Hertogh CMPM
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Family, Female, Humans, Male, Medical Staff, Middle Aged, Nursing Staff, Psychology, Qualitative Research, Restraint, Physical, Behavior Control, Dementia nursing, Dementia psychology, Homes for the Aged, Nursing Homes, Patient Satisfaction
- Abstract
Objective: To avoid restraints and involuntary care caregivers should be aware if and how a patient resists care. This article focuses on behavioural expressions of people with severe dementia in nursing homes that are interpreted by their formal and informal caregivers as possible expressions of their experience of involuntary care., Method: Concept mapping was used, following five steps: (1) brainstorming, (2) rating, (3) sorting, (4) statistical analysis & visual representation and (5) interpretation. Specialists (n = 12), nurses (n = 23) and relatives (n = 13) participated in separate groups ., Results: The views generated are grouped into clusters of behaviour, presented in graphic charts for each of the respondent groups. The large variety of behavioural symptoms includes, in all groups, not only the more obvious and direct behavioural expressions like aggression, resistance and agitation, but also more subtle behaviour such as sorrow, general discomfort or discontent., Conclusion(s): In the interpretation of behavioural symptoms of people with severe dementia it is important to take into account the possibility of that person experiencing involuntary care. Increased awareness and understanding of the meaning and consequences of the behavioural expressions is an important step in improving dementia care by avoiding restraints and involuntary care to its maximum.
- Published
- 2019
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