Conversations between persons with dementia disease living in nursing homes and nurses -
qualitative evaluation of an intervention with the validation method
Sammanfattning
Living with dementia disease (DD) can include difficulties describing experiences of everyday
lives, which can lead to withdrawal, social isolation or existential homelessness. Persons with DD
living in nursing homes are mainly dependent on the nurses for establishing and maintaining
relationships with those around them. It can be challenging for nurses to understand what a person
with DD is trying to express and to make themselves understood in turn. The validation method is
intended to facilitate communication with persons with DD, but to our knowledge, there have been no
qualitative studies of how this influences persons' communication. This study aimed to illuminate the
actions and reactions of persons with DD living in nursing homes in one-to-one conversations with
nurses during 1 year of validation method training, as observed in videotapes. Four persons with DD
were involved in videotaped conversations with four nurses who were participating in a validation
method training programme. Videotapes with at least 5 months between the first and last recording
were analysed and compared qualitatively. The findings are presented in four categories that were
identified to various degrees in conversations at the beginning and at the end of the programme:
being uninterested in or unable to answer questions, talking about more than one topic of
conversation at the same time, trying to talk about what is on one's mind and speaking more freely
about what is on one's mind. In the videotaped conversations at the end of the programme, the
persons had the opportunity to use their remaining communication abilities. This may have been
related to the development of the nurses' communication skills during the training programme, and
so it is possible that persons with DD could benefit from communicating with nurses trained in the
validation method. Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons.