NonPharmacological interventions for managing wandering in the community: A narrative review of the evidence base

Dementia‐related wandering is exhibited by as many as 63% of people with dementia living in the community. There is strong evidence that people with dementia who wander are at risk of life‐threatening outcomes including injury from falls, exhaustion, weight loss, and becoming lost. Furthermore, care...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health & social care in the community 2019-03, Vol.27 (2), p.306-319
Hauptverfasser: MacAndrew, Margaret, Brooks, Deborah, Beattie, Elizabeth
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container_title Health & social care in the community
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creator MacAndrew, Margaret
Brooks, Deborah
Beattie, Elizabeth
description Dementia‐related wandering is exhibited by as many as 63% of people with dementia living in the community. There is strong evidence that people with dementia who wander are at risk of life‐threatening outcomes including injury from falls, exhaustion, weight loss, and becoming lost. Furthermore, carers have reported that fear of a person with dementia becoming lost contributes to them taking extreme measures in an attempt to maintain safety at home and there are few guidelines to direct care practices. Previous literature reviews of interventions to manage wandering have been inconclusive as the quality of research resulted in most studies being excluded. This narrative review aimed to report on the current state of wandering intervention science for people with dementia cared for in the community. An extensive search of articles and grey literature published between January 1999 and November 2017 was conducted and included quantitative studies that reported findings of nonpharmacological interventions for people with dementia living in the community that reported outcome measures of wandering characteristics (e.g., frequent ambulation, pacing, and boundary transgression). Eleven papers met the inclusion criteria, the majority of which were small nonrandomised studies or case studies with interventions that focused on: engaging the person with dementia in an activity, improving safety with environmental modifications, and technology to improve navigation or to monitor movement. While the strength of the evidence was low, the review has identified some promising interventions that carers of people with dementia could trial to reduce risky aspects of wandering, as well as identifying potential directions for future research.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Accidental Falls - prevention & control
Caregivers
Community
Dementia
Evidence-Based Practice
Falls
Fatigue
Fear & phobias
Humans
Injuries
Intervention
Literature reviews
Narratives
Navigation
Personal safety
Quality of care
Review
Technology
Transgression
Wandering
Wandering Behavior
Weight loss
title NonPharmacological interventions for managing wandering in the community: A narrative review of the evidence base
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