Abstract
IntroductionSupport following a dementia diagnosis in the UK is variable. Attending a Recovery College course with and for people with dementia, their supporters and healthcare professionals (staff), may enable people to explore and enact ways to live well with dementia. Recovery Colleges are established within mental health services worldwide, offering peer-supported short courses coproduced in partnership between staff and people with lived experience of mental illness. The concept of recovery is challenging in dementia narratives, with little evidence of how the Recovery College model could work as a method of postdiagnostic dementia support.Methods and analysisUsing a realist evaluation approach, this research will examine and define what works, for whom, in what circumstances and why, in Recovery College dementia courses. The ethnographic study will recruit five case studies from National Health Service Mental Health Trusts across England. Sampling will seek diversity in new or long-standing courses, delivery methods and demographics of population served. Participant observations will examine course coproduction. Interviews will be undertaken with people with dementia, family and friend supporters and staff involved in coproducing and commissioning the courses, as well as people attending. Documentary materials will be reviewed. Analysis will use a realist logic of analysis to develop a programme theory containing causal explanations for outcomes, in the form of context-mechanism-outcome-configurations, at play in each case.Ethics and disseminationThe study received approval from Coventry & Warwickshire Research Ethics Committee (22/WM/0215). Ethical concerns include not privileging any voice, consent for embedded observational fieldwork with people who may experience fluctuating mental capacity and balancing researcher ‘embedded participant’ roles in publicly accessible learning events. Drawing on the realist programme theory, two stakeholder groups, one people living with dementia and one staff will work with researchers to coproduce resources to support coproducing Recovery College dementia courses aligned with postdiagnostic services.
Funder
National Institute for Health Research
NIHR
Reference28 articles.
1. Social stigma of people with dementia;Rewerska-Juśko;J Alzheimers Dis,2020
2. A systematic review of dementia-related stigma research: can we move the stigma dial?;Herrmann;Am J Geriatr Psychiatry,2018
3. Experiences of shame for people with dementia: an interpretative phenomenological analysis;Aldridge;Dementia (London),2019
4. O’Shea E , Keogh F , Heneghan C . Post-diagnostic support for people with dementia and their carers (online). 2018. Available: https://www.understandtogether.ie/news-and-events/news /Dementia-Post-diagnostic-Support-Literature-Review.pdf [Accessed 8 Sep 2020].
5. Gauthier S , Webster C , Servaes S , et al . World Alzheimer report 2022: life after diagnosis: navigating treatment, care and support London, England Alzheimer’s Disease International; 2022.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献