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What Makes Institutional Long-Term Care the Most Appropriate Setting for People With Dementia? Exploring the Influence of Client Characteristics, Decision-Maker Attributes, and Country in 8 European Nations

Authors :
Sue Tucker
Christian Brand
Caroline Sutcliffe
David Challis
Kai Saks
Hilde Verbeek
Esther Cabrera
Staffan Karlsson
Helena Leino-Kilpi
Astrid Stephan
Maria E. Soto
Gabriele Meyer
Anna Renom-Guiteras
Dirk Sauerland
Ansgar Wübker
Patrick Bremer
Jan P.H. Hamers
Basema Afram
Hanneke C. Beerens
Michel H.C. Bleijlevens
Sandra M.G. Zwakhalen
Dirk Ruwaard
Ton Ambergen
Ingalill Rahm Hallberg
Ulla Melin Emilsson
Christina Bokberg
Connie Lethin
David Jolley
Ian Bowns
Brenda Roe
Alistair Burns
Jaana Koskenniemi
Riitta Suhonen
Matti Viitanen
Seija Arve
Minna Stolt
Maija Hupli
Ene-Margit Tiit
Jelena Leibur
Katrin Raamat
Angelika Armolik
Teija Tuula Marjatta Toivari
Adelaida Zabalegui
Ester Risco
Carme Alvira
Marta Farre
Susana Miguel
Maria Soto
Agathe Milhet
Sandrine Sourdet
Sophie Gillette
Bruno Vellas
RS: CAPHRI - R1 - Ageing and Long-Term Care
Health Services Research
RS: Academische Werkplaats Ouderenzorg
Promovendi PHPC
RS: CAPHRI - R2 - Creating Value-Based Health Care
FHML Methodologie & Statistiek
Source :
Tucker, S, Brand, C, Sutcliffe, C, Challis, D, Saks, K, Verbeek, H, Cabrera, E, Karlsson, S, Leino-Kilpi, H, Stephan, A & Soto, M E 2016, ' What makes institutional long-term care the most appropriate setting for people with dementia? Exploring the influence of client characteristics, decision-maker attributes, and country in 8 European nations ', Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, vol. 17, no. 5, pp. 465.e9-465.e15 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2016.02.025, Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 17(5), 465.e9-465.e15. Elsevier Science
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To explore the extent to which client characteristics, decision-maker attributes, and country influence judgments of institutional long-term care (ILTC) appropriateness for people with dementia.DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A total of 161 experts in dementia care from 8 European countries reviewed a series of 14 vignettes representing people with dementia on the cusp of ILTC admission and indicated the most appropriate setting in which to support each case in a simple discrete choice exercise: own home, very sheltered housing, residential home, or nursing home. At least 16 experts participated in each country (Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom).MEASUREMENTS: Descriptive statistics were used to characterize the experts and their placement preferences. Logistic regression modeling was used to explore the extent to which the sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of people with dementia, and the profession, workplace, and country of decision-makers were associated with ILTC recommendation.RESULTS: Client characteristics, decision-maker attributes, and country all seemed to play a part in influencing professionals' perceptions of the appropriateness of ILTC for people with dementia. Expert decision-makers were more likely to recommend ILTC for individuals who required help with mobility or had multiple care needs, and appeared to give more weight to carers' than clients' wishes. Community-based social workers were less likely than other professional groups to favor ILTC placement. Experts in Finland, Germany, and the United Kingdom were less likely to recommend ILTC than experts in France, the Netherlands, and Estonia; experts in Sweden and Spain took an intermediate position.CONCLUSION: This study provides new understanding of the factors that shape professionals' perceptions of ILTC appropriateness and highlights the need to construct multifaceted models of institutionalization when planning services for people with dementia. It also has several important clinical implications (including flagging interventions that could decrease the need for ILTC), and provides a basis for enhancing professionals' decision-making capabilities (including the greater involvement of clients themselves).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15258610
Volume :
17
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f85794832ac7ae43c203e3d78e133dfc