Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences

Person-centered care is important to the quality of life of nursing home residents with dementia. Preference assessments enable person-centered care by documenting residents’ preferred activities. Residents with severe dementia are less likely to have a role in preference assessment due to communica...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burshnic, Vanessa L.
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7753
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8950&context=etd
id ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-8950
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-89502019-11-22T10:12:27Z Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences Burshnic, Vanessa L. Person-centered care is important to the quality of life of nursing home residents with dementia. Preference assessments enable person-centered care by documenting residents’ preferred activities. Residents with severe dementia are less likely to have a role in preference assessment due to communication challenges associated with the disease. External supports (visual and text cues) are effective in improving the communication of residents with dementia, but these cues are often not used in practice. Standard assessment (verbal questioning) places greater demands on short-term memory and attention, which are known deficits in dementia. Applying a within-subjects design, this study evaluated two conditions (standard and supported) for assessing preferences of residents with severe dementia (N=21). This study examined the effect of these conditions on residents’ consistency over time (1-week) and utterance types in response to preference questions. Naïve judges (N=10) listened to the interviews and rated residents’ communication clarity and their confidence with understanding residents’ preferences. Results show that residents with severe dementia can report preferences with similar consistency in both assessment conditions; however, residents may comprehend the assessment better when provided in a supported format. In addition, residents successfully engaged in preference interviews without proxy participation. Anecdotally, many residents demonstrated an accurate understanding of their environment and how they would prefer to spend their days. Future studies will optimize visual stimuli, choice options, staff training components, efficiency measures, and examine acceptability by nursing home staff. 2019-07-02T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7753 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8950&context=etd Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons decision-making long-term care person-centered care Other Medical Specialties Social and Behavioral Sciences Speech and Hearing Science
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic decision-making
long-term care
person-centered care
Other Medical Specialties
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Speech and Hearing Science
spellingShingle decision-making
long-term care
person-centered care
Other Medical Specialties
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Speech and Hearing Science
Burshnic, Vanessa L.
Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences
description Person-centered care is important to the quality of life of nursing home residents with dementia. Preference assessments enable person-centered care by documenting residents’ preferred activities. Residents with severe dementia are less likely to have a role in preference assessment due to communication challenges associated with the disease. External supports (visual and text cues) are effective in improving the communication of residents with dementia, but these cues are often not used in practice. Standard assessment (verbal questioning) places greater demands on short-term memory and attention, which are known deficits in dementia. Applying a within-subjects design, this study evaluated two conditions (standard and supported) for assessing preferences of residents with severe dementia (N=21). This study examined the effect of these conditions on residents’ consistency over time (1-week) and utterance types in response to preference questions. Naïve judges (N=10) listened to the interviews and rated residents’ communication clarity and their confidence with understanding residents’ preferences. Results show that residents with severe dementia can report preferences with similar consistency in both assessment conditions; however, residents may comprehend the assessment better when provided in a supported format. In addition, residents successfully engaged in preference interviews without proxy participation. Anecdotally, many residents demonstrated an accurate understanding of their environment and how they would prefer to spend their days. Future studies will optimize visual stimuli, choice options, staff training components, efficiency measures, and examine acceptability by nursing home staff.
author Burshnic, Vanessa L.
author_facet Burshnic, Vanessa L.
author_sort Burshnic, Vanessa L.
title Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences
title_short Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences
title_full Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences
title_fullStr Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences
title_full_unstemmed Supporting Persons with Dementia in Communicating their Care Preferences
title_sort supporting persons with dementia in communicating their care preferences
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/7753
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=8950&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT burshnicvanessal supportingpersonswithdementiaincommunicatingtheircarepreferences
_version_ 1719295193158516736