Lesley Jones, Nicky Cullum, Ruth Watson, James Thompson, John Keady
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Using care aesthetics as an overarching explanatory lens, this article focuses on the care of one patient (Charlotte – not her real name) resident on a dementia assessment ward and uses a range of qualitative methods to illuminate that experience, including ethnographic observations and a care record review. To further develop the reach of the case study, interviews were also conducted with Charlotte's husband as her main family carer and key ward staff involved in Charlotte's care. Data were analysed using a sensory and narrative-based method to provide a sequential, embodied, individually positioned and storied account of Charlotte's care and interpreted experience on the ward. The analysis revealed that Charlotte's presentation of dementia was complex insofar as she resisted any attempt by the ward staff to offer her food or drink or to help with washing and dressing. Charlotte also swore frequently and loudly and spent time actively ‘watching’ and ‘looking’ at people and the environment in which she was now living. The findings contribute to the fields of critical dementia studies, dementia education, health-care practice and policy making, and may be used to highlight the value of sensory and embodied approaches to capturing a caring dynamic.</p>","PeriodicalId":51364,"journal":{"name":"Ageing & Society","volume":"143 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"‘Only my family can help’: the lived experience and care aesthetics of being resident on an NHS psychiatric/mental health inpatient dementia assessment ward – a single case study\",\"authors\":\"Lesley Jones, Nicky Cullum, Ruth Watson, James Thompson, John Keady\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/s0144686x24000096\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>In the United Kingdom, people living with dementia admitted to National Health Service (NHS) psychiatric/mental health inpatient dementia assessment wards (dementia assessment wards) are nearly always compulsorily detained under a section of the Mental Health Act 1983 owing to the risk and complexity of the presenting condition. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在英国,国民医疗服务系统(NHS)的精神科/心理健康科痴呆症评估住院病房(痴呆症评估病房)收治的痴呆症患者几乎都是根据《1983 年精神健康法案》(Mental Health Act 1983)的某一条款强制收治的,因为他们的病情具有风险性和复杂性。因此,痴呆症评估病房收治的都是社会上最脆弱的病人,但文献中对这些护理环境的研究和报道却很少。本文以护理美学为总体解释视角,重点关注一位居住在痴呆症评估病房的患者(夏洛特--非真名)的护理情况,并采用一系列定性方法(包括人种学观察和护理记录回顾)来阐明其护理体验。为了进一步扩大案例研究的范围,还对夏洛特的丈夫(她的主要家庭照顾者)和参与夏洛特护理工作的主要病房工作人员进行了访谈。数据分析采用了基于感官和叙事的方法,对夏洛特在病房的护理和解释经历进行了有序的、体现性的、个人定位的和故事性的描述。分析结果显示,夏洛特的痴呆症表现非常复杂,她拒绝病房工作人员为她提供食物或饮料,也不愿意帮助她洗漱和穿衣。夏洛特还经常大声咒骂,并花时间主动 "观察 "和 "注视 "周围的人和她现在生活的环境。研究结果有助于痴呆症批判性研究、痴呆症教育、医疗保健实践和政策制定等领域,并可用于强调感官和体现方法在捕捉关爱动态方面的价值。
‘Only my family can help’: the lived experience and care aesthetics of being resident on an NHS psychiatric/mental health inpatient dementia assessment ward – a single case study
In the United Kingdom, people living with dementia admitted to National Health Service (NHS) psychiatric/mental health inpatient dementia assessment wards (dementia assessment wards) are nearly always compulsorily detained under a section of the Mental Health Act 1983 owing to the risk and complexity of the presenting condition. As such, dementia assessment wards admit some of the most vulnerable patients in society, yet these environments of care are under-researched and under-reported in the literature. Using care aesthetics as an overarching explanatory lens, this article focuses on the care of one patient (Charlotte – not her real name) resident on a dementia assessment ward and uses a range of qualitative methods to illuminate that experience, including ethnographic observations and a care record review. To further develop the reach of the case study, interviews were also conducted with Charlotte's husband as her main family carer and key ward staff involved in Charlotte's care. Data were analysed using a sensory and narrative-based method to provide a sequential, embodied, individually positioned and storied account of Charlotte's care and interpreted experience on the ward. The analysis revealed that Charlotte's presentation of dementia was complex insofar as she resisted any attempt by the ward staff to offer her food or drink or to help with washing and dressing. Charlotte also swore frequently and loudly and spent time actively ‘watching’ and ‘looking’ at people and the environment in which she was now living. The findings contribute to the fields of critical dementia studies, dementia education, health-care practice and policy making, and may be used to highlight the value of sensory and embodied approaches to capturing a caring dynamic.
期刊介绍:
Ageing & Society is an interdisciplinary and international journal devoted to the understanding of human ageing and the circumstances of older people in their social and cultural contexts. It draws contributions and has readers from many disciplines including gerontology, sociology, demography, psychology, economics, medicine, social policy and the humanities. Ageing & Society promotes high-quality original research which is relevant to an international audience to encourage the exchange of ideas across the broad audience of multidisciplinary academics and practitioners working in the field of ageing.