Freedom and loneliness: dementia caregiver experiences of the nursing home transition

Author:

Holton Eimile1,Boyle Neasa Bernadette1,Simons Rachel2,Warters Austin3,O’Philbin Laura4,Lawlor Brian5,Gibb Matthew6,O’Sullivan Roger7,Pertl Maria8,Quaid Kevin9,Forrest Ruth9,McHugh Power Joanna1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Maynooth University Department of Psychology, , Maynooth, Co. Kildare , Ireland

2. Government of Ireland Older Persons Policy Development Unit, Department of Health, , 50-58 Lower Baggot Street, Dublin 2 , Ireland

3. Services for Older Adults, Health Services Executive , Ballymun Civic Centre, Dublin 9 , Ireland

4. Alzheimer Society of Ireland , Blackrock, Co Dublin , Ireland

5. Trinity College Dublin Global Brain Health Institute and School of Medicine, , Dublin, Ireland

6. St James’s Hospital , Dublin 8 , Ireland

7. Institute of Public Health , 700 SCR, Dublin 8, Ireland and Norther n Ireland

8. Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland , St Stephen's Green, Dublin 2 , Ireland

9. Dementia Research Advisory Team, Alzheimer Society of Ireland , Blackrock, Co Dublin , Ireland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundthe transition to nursing home care has previously been linked to negative outcomes for spousal caregivers of persons with dementia (PwD). However, little is known about the experience or trajectory of loneliness in spousal caregivers during this time.Objectivesto explore experiences of loneliness in caregivers during the nursing home admission of their spouse or partner with dementia.Methodssemi-structured interviews were conducted with 11 individuals living in Ireland between Oct 2020 and June 2021, who were married to/partnered with a PwD who had, in the past 7 years, moved to full-time nursing home care. Data were collected and analysed using a deductive qualitative analytic strategy in the grounded theory tradition.Resultsdata were interpreted in the context of Weiss’ typology of social and emotional loneliness and indicated that social loneliness increased for many at the point of diagnosis, decreasing somewhat after the transition, while emotional loneliness increased across the transition. Data were used to refine an existing synthesised model of loneliness, providing an updated model of the causes and contexts of loneliness.Conclusionsthe transition to nursing home care differentially affects loneliness subtypes. Results have implications for other transitions, which should be assessed in terms of various subtypes of loneliness. Our refined theoretical synthesis model of loneliness also warrants further evaluation.

Funder

Irish Research Council New Foundations Scheme

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging,General Medicine

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