Remote visits to address loneliness for people living with dementia in care homes: A descriptive qualitative study of visitors' perceptions

Author:

Barsan Kelti1,Swindle Jennifer1,Boscart Veronique M.2,Chacinsky Dorothy1,Hoben Matthias13,Hopper Tammy4,McGilton Katherine56,O'Rourke Hannah M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Health Sciences, Faculty of Nursing University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

2. School of Public Health and Health Systems University of Waterloo Waterloo Ontario Canada

3. Faculty of Health, School of Health Policy and Management York University Toronto Alberta Canada

4. College of Health Sciences, Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

5. Toronto Rehabilitation Institute University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada

6. Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractAimsTo assess visitors' perceptions of the benefits and challenges related to engaging in a remote visit intervention, which was designed to address the loneliness of people living with moderate to severe dementia in care homes.DesignA qualitative descriptive study.MethodsTwenty‐four people living with dementia in care homes in Canada and their family and friends (i.e., remote visitors) took part in facilitated remote visits in 2021. Each person living with dementia received scheduled visits for 30–60 min per week for 6 weeks. Participants chose to complete one longer visit, or multiple shorter visits, per week. Twenty remote visitors participated in semi‐structured interviews after six weeks to discuss their perspectives on the effectiveness, benefits and challenges of the program in relation to addressing experiences of loneliness of the person living with dementia. Conventional content analysis was used to analyze the data.ResultsWe describe three themes and several sub‐themes. Themes support the use of remote visits to enhance, rather than replace, in‐person visits; the benefits of remote visits for the person living with dementia and their remote visitors; and the conditions that lead to a successful remote visit.ConclusionRemote visitors reported that facilitated visits had positive effects for both visitors and people living with dementia with respect to loneliness, communication, relationships, and social connection.Implications for Patient CareClinicians can consider the factors that contributed to positive experiences of remote visits. The factors include individualized, facilitated visits that were flexible, and the use of reliable technology in a supportive, distraction‐free environment.Impact Loneliness and social isolation are growing health concerns. When experienced by people living with dementia residing in long‐term care homes, loneliness and social isolation can result in lower levels of quality of life and well‐being, and higher levels of anxiety and responsive behaviours. Remote visitors perceived that facilitated remote visits have the potential to address loneliness and improve quality of life for people living with dementia and also offer social support to remote visitors. The findings can impact clinician practice by guiding the use of remote visits in care homes, and inform future intervention research to evaluate the effectiveness of remote visits for people living with dementia and their remote visitors. Reporting MethodThis manuscript adheres to the relevant EQUATOR guidelines (the Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research or COREQ).Patient or Public ContributionNo patient or public contribution.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference34 articles.

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4. Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI). (2022).Dementia in long‐term care.https://www.cihi.ca/en/dementia‐in‐canada/dementia‐care‐across‐the‐health‐system/dementia‐in‐long‐term‐care

5. The value of qualitative description in health services and policy research Valeur de la description qualitative dans la recherche sur les politiques et services de santé;Chafe R.;Healthcare Policy = Politiques de Sante,2017

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