How spouses evaluate Nursing Home Placement of their demented partner: a study about the
end of perseverance time
Engelsk titel: How spouses evaluate Nursing Home Placement of their demented partner: a study about the end
of perseverance time
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Författare:
Kraijo, Henk
;
de Leeuw, Rob
;
Schrijvers, Guus
Email: hj.kraijo@planet.nl
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 36
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 15043618
Sammanfattning
Aim
This study was about the final decision by spouses to have their demented partner placed in a
nursing home. The central question was whether the admission took place in the right time in their
point of view.
Method
Fourteen partners of persons with dementia evaluated the nursing home placement. They were
interviewed at home using a semi-structured questionnaire. Grounded theory was used to explore the
process of decision-making. In addition to the interviews, quantitative data were used from a 2-year
follow-up study.
Results
Results underline that the placement decision had to be made in phases over time. The first decision
is about placement of the relative on a waiting list, and the second decision is about the actual
placement in a nursing home once a place becomes available. This second and final decision often
had to be taken under time pressure to avoid a place in the nursing home being left empty. If they
had been given more time and space to reconsider their admission decision, most partners said they
could have had continued providing homecare longer. During the investigation, the following
classification in timeliness of the admission emerged: Placement was at the right time, too early, too
late or out of control.
Conclusion
Spouses indicated they could have kept on giving care for a longer period of time if they had been
given more time and space to make their final decision about the admission of their partner. It may
be helpful for informal and formal carers to focus on perseverance time in considering placement or
prolonged support at home. Placement at an appropriate time may lead to a higher degree of well-
being of informal carers before and especially after the admission. Published by arrangement with
John Wiley & Sons.