是否以及如何在家中存放枪支:从痴呆症安全试验中护理伙伴的经验中获得的定性见解。

Christopher E Knoepke, Kayla Meza, Jennifer D Portz, Megan L Ranney, Stacy M Fisher, Faris Omeragic, Emily Greenway, Mirella Castaneda, Daniel D Matlock, Marian E Betz
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摘要

背景:在美国,大多数痴呆症患者(PWD)都生活在由家人和/或无偿护理伙伴支持的社区环境中。在预防伤害和死亡的工作中,枪支使用权是护理伙伴与痴呆症患者共同做出的众多决定之一。关于使用枪支的对话在社会上具有挑战性,但具体需要克服的挑战尚未描述:作为 "痴呆症安全试验 "的一部分,我们采访了护理伙伴,了解他们对残疾人家中使用枪支的看法和经验。受访者是美国讲英语的成年人(≥18 岁),他们是居住在社区的残疾人的无偿护理伙伴。我们采用聚焦法分析了受访者对有关(1)渴望安全和(2)害怕枪支暴力的访谈讨论的回应,并将观点归类为基本主题:在 2023 年 2 月至 2024 年 2 月期间,50 名护理伙伴参加了访谈,他们主要是女性(58%)、白人(66%)、成年子女(56%)和生活在同一家庭(64%)。聚焦技术产生的主要议题包括:(1)枪支是家庭安全的必要组成部分;(2)对意外/冲动性枪支暴力的恐惧;(3)观察到的风险和 "险情";以及(4)对家庭枪支作为冲突根源的不同看法。主题描述并不因护理伙伴与残疾人的关系(成年子女、配偶、其他)而有所不同:对于护理伙伴来说,考虑是否以及如何改变残疾人居住地的枪支获取途径可能会很困难。护理伙伴表达了限制接触枪支的愿望,但又担心与残疾人产生冲突,以及无法接触枪支对自卫的影响。不同护理伙伴子集的调查结果相似,这表明向护理伙伴提供标准化工具和信息可能会有效促进残疾人家庭的安全。
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Whether and how to store firearms in the home: Qualitative insights from care partner experiences in the Safety in Dementia Trial.

Background: Most people with dementia (PWD) in the United States live in community settings supported by family and/or unpaid care partners. Firearms access is one of many decisions care partners navigate alongside PWD in efforts to prevent injuries and deaths. Conversations about firearms access are socially challenging, although specific challenges to be overcome have not been described.

Methods: As part of the larger Safety in Dementia Trial, we interviewed care partners about their views and experiences regarding firearms access in the home where the PWD resides. Interviewees were English-speaking adults (≥18 years) in the United States who are unpaid care partners of community-dwelling PWD. Responses to interview discussions related to (1) a desire for safety, and (2) fear of firearm violence was analyzed using a focusing process to categorize views into essential themes.

Results: Fifty care partners, who were primarily female (58%), White (66%), adult children (56%), and living in the same household (64%), participated in interviews between February 2023-February 2024. Dominant themes emerging from the focusing technique included (1) firearms as a necessary component of home safety; (2) fear of accidental/impulsive firearm violence; (3) observed risk and "near misses"; and (4) differing views on home firearms as a source of conflict. Thematic descriptions did not differ according to care partner's relationship to the PWD (adult child, spouse, other).

Conclusions: Considering whether and how to alter access to firearms where PWD reside can be difficult for care partners to navigate. Care partners expressed a desire to limit firearms access, but worried both about creating conflict with the PWD and the self-defense implications of making firearms inaccessible. Findings were similar across subsets of care partners indicating that standardized tools and messaging to care partners may be effective in promoting safety in homes with PWD.

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