南非的老年痴呆症:情况分析。

Dementia (London, England) Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-19 DOI:10.1177/14713012231183358
Roxanne Jacobs, Marguerite Schneider, Nicolas Farina, Petra du Toit, Sumaiyah Docrat, Adelina Comas-Herrera, Martin Knapp
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引用次数: 0

摘要

南非需要了解现有护理和支持的现状,以加强对痴呆症的应对。本研究对南非目前为老年人、痴呆症患者及其家人提供的医疗、护理和支持进行了现状分析。这是描述现有需求和服务状况的第一步,也为南非制定加强痴呆症应对措施的优先事项提供了证据基础。本情况分析分三个阶段进行:(1) 以综合主题指南为指导进行案头审查,其中包括世界卫生组织全球痴呆症观察站的指标;(2) 对多部门利益相关者进行访谈,以核实案头审查中使用的二手资料来源,并确定政策和服务规定中的差距和机遇;(3) 进行 SWOT 分析,检查南非当前护理和支持规定中的优势、劣势、机遇和威胁。我们的研究结果突显了当前服务提供方面的差距和机遇,并显示了结构性因素是如何对诊断、支持和护理造成障碍的。目前迫切需要跨部门的政策应对措施,以支持和加强当前的医疗、社会护理和长期支持系统,从而使痴呆症患者及其家人能够安享晚年。本文是关于加强痴呆症应对措施的大型研究(STRIDE 项目)的一部分。
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Dementia in South Africa: A Situational Analysis.

There is a need in South Africa to understand the status of available care and support to strengthen responses to dementia. This study provides a situational analysis of the current provisions of health, care and support for older persons, people living with dementia and their families in South Africa. It is a first step towards describing the landscape of needs and services available, and provides an evidence base to inform priority-setting for strengthening responses to dementia in South Africa. This situational analysis was conducted in three phases: (1) a desk review guided by a comprehensive topic guide which includes the WHO's Global Dementia Observatory indicators; (2) multi-sectoral stakeholder interviews to verify the secondary sources used in the desk review, and to identify gaps and opportunities in policy and service provisions; and (3) a SWOT-analysis examining the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats in current care and support provisions in South Africa. Our findings highlight the gaps and opportunities with current service provision and show how structural factors create barriers to diagnosis, support, and care. There is an urgent need for intersectoral policy responses to support and strengthen current health, social care, and long-term support systems so that people living with dementia and their families can live and age well. This paper forms part of a larger study on strengthening responses to dementia (The STRIDE project).

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