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Original Articles

Social care and support needs of community-dwelling people with dementia and concurrent visual impairment

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Pages 961-967 | Received 02 Jun 2015, Accepted 23 Apr 2016, Published online: 24 May 2016
 

ABSTRACT

Objectives: This study explored the social care and support needs of people with dementia and visual impairment, and the barriers and facilitators for meeting these needs.

Method: Twenty-six semi-structured interviews were conducted: 21 joint and 5 individual interviews with the person with dementia and visual impairment (n=4) or their family/paid carer (n=1). Interviews were analysed thematically.

Results: Three themes are presented. (1) Social care needs: having dementia can reduce an individual's ability to cope with their visual impairment, and lead to increased dependency and reduced daily stimulation. (2) Barriers to using technology to meet social care needs: difficulties were reported with learning to use unfamiliar technology and the cost of visual impairment aids, and for some, the presence of dementia made visual impairment aids unusable and vice versa. (3) Familiarity as a facilitator for meeting social care needs: living at home or taking furnishings and ornaments into a new home facilitated independence, and continuity of paid carers/volunteers facilitated the caring relationship between the individual and staff/volunteer.

Conclusion: Care workers will better serve older people if they are aware of the social care and support needs that arise from having both dementia and visual impairment.

Acknowledgments

We thank the organisations that assisted us with finding participants to interview, and colleagues for conducting interviews with people with dementia and visual impairment: Michele Board, Jennifer Bray, Karen Croucher, and Mark Bevan. We thank the wider project team (including the interviewers named above and Simon Evans, Anna Clarke, Julie Barrett, and Sarah Buchanan) and advisory group (Caroline Glendinning, Vivien Lyons, Amanda Reeves, and Peter Rush) for their critical comment and input throughout the project, and those who attended a project event to provide their comment on our findings.

Disclosure Statement

We declare no potential or actual conflicts of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research, School for Social Care Research under Grant T976/T11-084/UYKC.

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