Quality of life and dementia

Author:

Moyle Wendy1,Mcallister Margaret2,Venturato Lorraine1,Adams Trevor3

Affiliation:

1. Griffith University, Australia,

2. University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia,

3. University of Surrey, UK,

Abstract

Although we know that quality of life (QOL) can greatly influence a person's well-being, the measurement of QOL in individuals with dementia has, unfortunately, been largely ignored as a result of conceptual, logistical and measurement difficulties inherent in this population. To enable the voice of the person with dementia to be heard, a triangulated approach was adopted using survey data that aimed to assess the quality of life-Alzheimer's disease (QOL-AD) in Australian residential aged care and unstructured interviews with a small sample of participants ( n = 33). This article presents the survey results and demonstrates there were significant differences in QOL-AD scores between length of stay in the care setting groups, interpersonal relationship quality and self-esteem. Groups with greater physical impairment had lower QOL scores. It is concluded that the participants in this study were able to provide meaningful commentary on their QOL and that the findings may be useful when planning education of care staff and may contribute to theoretical models of dementia care.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,General Medicine

Reference49 articles.

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3. Adams, T. & Moyle, W. (2007). Transitions in ageing: A focus on dementia care nursing. In M. McAllister (Ed.), Solution focused nursing (pp. 154—162). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

4. Quality of Life in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease as Reported by Patient Proxies

5. A literature review of dementia care mapping: methodological considerations and efficacy

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