Library services enriching community engagement for dementia care: The Tales & Travels Program at a Canadian Public Library as a case study

Author:

Dai Jiamin1ORCID,Bartlett Joan C.1,Moffatt Karyn1

Affiliation:

1. McGill University, Canada

Abstract

Growing dementia-friendly library services are contributing to community-based dementia care. Emerging community programs in libraries and museums provide notable opportunities for promoting engagement and inclusivity, but these programs have yet to receive in-depth assessments and analyses to guide future research and practice. This paper presents a case study examining a social and storytelling program for people with dementia run by a Canadian public library. It investigates two research questions: How can public library programs contribute to community-based dementia care? And what are public libraries’ strengths and challenges in running programs for people with dementia? The study involves participant observations of the program and semi-structured interviews with people with dementia, caregivers, and program facilitators (librarians and Alzheimer Society coordinators). Through thematic analysis of fieldnotes and transcripts, the study reveals how this inclusive platform supports engagement, fosters relationships, helps caregivers, and reaches broader communities. This research further uncovers the librarians’ diversified roles as demonstrated through their collaboration with professionals, preparation and research, and facilitation of the sessions. This paper advances librarianship research on enriching community-based dementia care, including furthering inclusivity and engagement and extending accessible library services. By analyzing library programming for the dementia community and assessing its strengths and challenges, the paper highlights librarians’ awareness of the community’s evolving needs and their collaboration with other professionals. It offers practical insights on useful resources and emerging best practices that will hopefully inspire other initiatives in which information professionals can help improve the well-being of vulnerable populations.

Funder

AGE-WELL

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Fonds de Recherche du Québec – Nature et Technologies

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Library and Information Sciences

Reference55 articles.

1. Alzheimer Society of British Columbia (2016) Dementia-friendly communities local government toolkit. Available at: https://archive.alzheimer.ca/sites/default/files/files/bc/advocacy-and-education/dfc/dfc_toolkit_v.jan2016.pdf (accessed 9 October 2021).

2. Alzheimer Society of Canada (2016) Prevalence and monetary costs of dementia in Canada. Available at: https://archive.alzheimer.ca/sites/default/files/files/national/statistics/prevalenceandcostsofdementia_en.pdf (accessed 9 October 2021).

3. 2020 Alzheimer's disease facts and figures

4. Community outreach partnerships

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