Family Composition and Expressions of Family-Focused Care Needs at an Academic Memory Disorders Clinic

Objective. To understand who dementia patients identify as their family and how dementia affects family life. Background. Dementia care is often delivered in family settings, so understanding the constituency and needs of the family unit involved in care is important for determining contributors to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Interdisciplinary perspectives on infectious diseases 2013, Vol.2013 (2013), p.1-6
Hauptverfasser: Riedel, Brandalyn C., Ducharme, Jamie K., Geldmacher, David S.
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container_issue 2013
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container_title Interdisciplinary perspectives on infectious diseases
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creator Riedel, Brandalyn C.
Ducharme, Jamie K.
Geldmacher, David S.
description Objective. To understand who dementia patients identify as their family and how dementia affects family life. Background. Dementia care is often delivered in family settings, so understanding the constituency and needs of the family unit involved in care is important for determining contributors to family quality of life. Design/Methods. Seventy-seven families receiving care at an academic dementia clinic completed questionnaires regarding the affected person and the family. Responses were categorized as focused on an individual’s needs or the family’s needs. Results. Respondents identified a mean of 3.77 family members involved in care. Spouse (80.5%), daughter (58.4%), son (46.8%), and stepchild or child-in-law (37.7%) were the most frequently listed family members. Questions regarding the effect of dementia-related changes in cognition and mood were most likely to elicit a family-focused response. Questionnaire items that inquired about specific medical questions and strategies to improve family function were least likely to elicit a family-focused response. Conclusions. Both caregivers and persons with dementia frequently provided family-focused responses, supporting the construct of dementia as an illness that affects life in the family unit. This finding reinforces the potential utility of family-centered quality of life measures in assessing treatment success for people with dementia.
doi_str_mv 10.1155/2013/436271
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To understand who dementia patients identify as their family and how dementia affects family life. Background. Dementia care is often delivered in family settings, so understanding the constituency and needs of the family unit involved in care is important for determining contributors to family quality of life. Design/Methods. Seventy-seven families receiving care at an academic dementia clinic completed questionnaires regarding the affected person and the family. Responses were categorized as focused on an individual’s needs or the family’s needs. Results. Respondents identified a mean of 3.77 family members involved in care. Spouse (80.5%), daughter (58.4%), son (46.8%), and stepchild or child-in-law (37.7%) were the most frequently listed family members. Questions regarding the effect of dementia-related changes in cognition and mood were most likely to elicit a family-focused response. Questionnaire items that inquired about specific medical questions and strategies to improve family function were least likely to elicit a family-focused response. Conclusions. Both caregivers and persons with dementia frequently provided family-focused responses, supporting the construct of dementia as an illness that affects life in the family unit. This finding reinforces the potential utility of family-centered quality of life measures in assessing treatment success for people with dementia.</description><identifier>ISSN: 2090-8024</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 2090-0252</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1687-708X</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 2090-0252</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1155/2013/436271</identifier><identifier>PMID: 24251066</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Cairo, Egypt: Hindawi Puplishing Corporation</publisher><subject>Alzheimer's disease ; Care and treatment ; Complications and side effects ; Dementia ; Family ; Family life ; Health aspects ; Mentally ill ; Psychological aspects ; Quality of life ; Risk factors ; Social aspects</subject><ispartof>Interdisciplinary perspectives on infectious diseases, 2013, Vol.2013 (2013), p.1-6</ispartof><rights>Copyright © 2013 Brandalyn C. Riedel et al.</rights><rights>COPYRIGHT 2013 John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc.</rights><rights>Copyright © 2013 Brandalyn C. 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To understand who dementia patients identify as their family and how dementia affects family life. Background. Dementia care is often delivered in family settings, so understanding the constituency and needs of the family unit involved in care is important for determining contributors to family quality of life. Design/Methods. Seventy-seven families receiving care at an academic dementia clinic completed questionnaires regarding the affected person and the family. Responses were categorized as focused on an individual’s needs or the family’s needs. Results. Respondents identified a mean of 3.77 family members involved in care. Spouse (80.5%), daughter (58.4%), son (46.8%), and stepchild or child-in-law (37.7%) were the most frequently listed family members. Questions regarding the effect of dementia-related changes in cognition and mood were most likely to elicit a family-focused response. Questionnaire items that inquired about specific medical questions and strategies to improve family function were least likely to elicit a family-focused response. Conclusions. Both caregivers and persons with dementia frequently provided family-focused responses, supporting the construct of dementia as an illness that affects life in the family unit. 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subjects Alzheimer's disease
Care and treatment
Complications and side effects
Dementia
Family
Family life
Health aspects
Mentally ill
Psychological aspects
Quality of life
Risk factors
Social aspects
title Family Composition and Expressions of Family-Focused Care Needs at an Academic Memory Disorders Clinic
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