Affiliation:
1. Dementia Services Information and Development Centre Ireland
2. Trinity College & St James Hospital
3. National Co-ordinator of Care Services
4. Alzheimer Society of Ireland
Abstract
The design of residential care facilities for people with dementia has become an area of increasing clinical, architectural and research interest (Kitwood, 1997; Judd et al., 1998; Lawton, 2001). Less is known about day care design and about staff views of the adequacy of the social and built environment in which day care takes place. This article reports survey data on a study of 18 day centres providing dementia-specific care across the Republic of Ireland. Quantitative and qualitative data were collected from 77 practitioners (nurses in charge, care staff and branch managers). The focus of the research was on examining staff views of the physical characteristics of day care settings, the effectiveness of day care and staff views on the major benefits derived from day care attendance. The research also explored the perceptions of staff on how design features could be improved and their views on challenging behaviours, the suitability of certain clients for day care, staff training needs and the cost of care. Policy, practice and research implications emerging from the study are discussed. The article argues for the need for guidelines in best practice in dementia day care to be established in Ireland.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,General Medicine
Cited by
3 articles.
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