Personhood discourses in dementia care have gained prominence and current care home standards mandate that care should be “person-centred”. However, it is unclear how the personhood of staff is construed within the care relationship. This paper aims to explore how the personhood of paid carers of people with dementia can be understood by focussing on the views and experiences of care home staff. We undertook a secondary qualitative analysis of interviews with 25 paid care staff in England, conducted as part of the MARQUE (Managing Agitation and Raising QUality of lifE) study. The authors inductively developed themes around the topic of personhood for staff, contrasting management and care staff perspectives. We found that many care staff are not identified as persons in their own right by their employing institutions, and that there is a general lack of acknowledgment of the moral work of caring that occurs within formal care work. This oversight can reduce the complex relationships of care work to a series of care tasks, challenges care workers’ self-worth and self-efficacy, and impede their efforts to deliver person-centred care. We conclude that care staff status as persons in their own right should be explicitly considered in quality standards and supported by employers’ policies and practices, not simply for their role in preserving the personhood of people with dementia but for their own sense of valued personhood. Enhancing staff personhood may also result in improved care.
Background: It has been suggested that cognitive behavioural therapy for older adults be augmented with age-appropriate methods to enhance outcomes for depression treatment. Aims: This study investigated whether a CBT wisdom enhancement timeline technique for older adults reduced depression, as well as increase self-compassion and self-assessed wisdom. Method: An N-of-1 series trial with non-concurrent multiple-baseline AB design was conducted. Older adults experiencing depression, recruited from mental health service waiting lists, were randomly assigned to baseline conditions. Participants received five individual sessions of the examined intervention, offering a structured way of utilising one’s life experiences to evolve the psychological resource of wisdom within a cognitive behavioural framework, in order to improve mood. Participants completed idiographic daily measures and self-report standardised measures of depression, anxiety, self-compassion and wisdom during baseline and intervention phases, and at 1 month follow-up. Results: Six participants competed the study and were subject to standardised and single-case data analyses. Four participants were deemed responders with reliable changes in depression post-intervention with idiographic changes coinciding with intervention onset. Two participants saw clinically significant changes in depression scores at follow-up. One responder saw significant changes in measures of self-compassion and self-assessed wisdom. Conclusions: The examined technique shows promise as an effective technique for reducing depression in older adults. There is insufficient evidence to implicate wisdom and/or self-compassion as significant mechanisms of change. Clinical and theoretical implications are discussed.
IntroductionDelivering life-altering news is a difficult task that is frequently the responsibility of emergency physicians. However, the existing frameworks for guiding such interactions fail to address the physician-parent-patient dynamic of pediatric emergency encounters. To date, no study has investigated the parental perspective, limiting the ability to provide evidence-based recommendations. This study describes how parents experience receiving life-altering news about their child in emergency settings.MethodsThis qualitative study used virtual asynchronous focus groups. Through purposeful sampling of virtual support and advocacy groups, we recruited parents of children diagnosed with either malignancy or type 1 diabetes in an emergency department. Participants were then assigned to private Facebook groups established solely for this study. Questions were posted to these groups over the course of 5 days. At their convenience, participants could post responses, replies, or new questions. Three members of the research team performed thematic analysis and used team consensus to ensure validity.ResultsFour focus groups were conducted with a total of 28 participants. Parents described their experiences receiving life-altering news as a process with 4 primary emergent themes: lens through which they view the experience, the ED encounter, the immediate response, and the long-term impact. Each parent entered into the ED encounter with a unique collection of personal experiences, circumstances, and knowledge. These factors shaped the lens through which they perceived the events of the ED encounter. Ultimately, this determined participants' response to the life-altering news, leading to many long-term impacts on the various dynamics within each parent's life.ConclusionsThe words used to disclose life-altering news are only a small piece of the experience for parents. Personal lenses changed how encounters were perceived, resulting in variable and long-lasting implications. We recommend the following framework for providers: understand the lens, control encounters, manage responses, and respect long-term impacts.
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