The Impact of Social Distancing Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Dementia, Family Carers and Healthcare Professionals: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Setting
2.3. Participants
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1. Impact on Person with Dementia
To reheat it [the meal] together with the client and to make sure that the client would actually start eating. Well, we scaled that down, because at that moment the plan was, we’ll telephone the client about it and we’ll make sure everything’s ready to go. Well, this client lost four kilos in about two weeks.(HCP 29, home care)
Of course, they’re people, and they have been done with their life for a while. And they are kind of waiting, you know? I have a gentleman, 93 years old, and he says, well it really isn’t much fun anymore. I pray every night that I won’t open my eyes again. So this gentleman simply says give me the coronavirus.(HCP 26, home care)
3.2. Theme 2. Impact on Family Carer
That’s why I was so incredibly shocked that people from the nursing home didn’t wear the protection that I had to wear at the end of May. While they just walked around and picked up their kids from school and went everywhere, while I thought, well. I’m on Zoom all day for work, I don’t have kids in the house, I don’t have to go to school, I do my shopping online or whatever. I’m at less risk. So it’s weird that I should have to adhere to different measures, that different measures are applied to me than to the people at the nursing home. That’s just not right.(Family carer 7, LTC)
Look, rationally, I thought, yes, this is the best solution. Emotionally it’s something completely different of course, because I’d already had to let go once. From 24 h caring a day to 4 h caring a day. That was also very difficult, to leave that to others. And now, at a certain point, nothing.(Family carer 10, LTC)
My most distressing experience is of a man who sort of fell through the cracks. Because this man was actually ready for day care... he wasn’t in day care yet, but he should have been. But because he wasn’t, I had nothing to offer him. I couldn’t offer a volunteer because they didn’t come in during the pandemic. I could not offer any day care at that time, because there was none. I could not offer individual counselling, because I was not allowed to. And his partner, she called us almost every day crying that it was too much for her.(HCP 25, home care)
I feel isolated, but that has little to do with COVID. It’s just that I can’t live my own life and I have to take someone else into account all the time, and I do, but sometimes it’s a bit much.(Family carer 31, home care)
3.3. Theme 3. Impact on HCP
And at some point there was this shift, when obviously we stopped scaling down and started to scale up. And then came pressure from the hospitals. Because patients had to go home. And you needed to deal with that too. So we looked at each other and we said, we’ll just have to pull together.(HCP 29, home care)
The restrictions on family allowed to be with their dying father or mother, in a protective suit, at 1.5 metres, 3 visitors per 24 h. So one visitor allowed per 8 h. Then they were not allowed to use anything. You couldn’t offer them coffee, because they were not allowed to remove the protection, and then the person had died and they were quickly taken away in double body bags. We couldn’t see them off. We couldn’t do anything at all. And that was it. Well, that’s just not the kind of care you want to provide. And informal carers, wives who first haven’t seen their husbands for a long time. Eventually he dies. And then you have to say, well, don’t touch him. That was just unbearable. But you had no choice. That really got to me.(HCP 15, LTC)
This was very difficult, because I would put an arm around their father or mother and they’d be standing there. There were parties, birthdays were celebrated in that way. One gentleman died and that was his last birthday. There’s a clip where I’m dancing with a few residents there and then you see that family at a distance. Yes, that’s simply heart-breaking.(HCP 18, LTC)
3.4. Theme 4. Differences between Home Care and LTC
Restaurants, huge amounts of food, because they had supplies they couldn’t use anymore. Yes, heart-warming. Or neighbourhood children who had all made drawings and sent cards. And yes, it is really fantastic to see what the Netherlands is like then. So, so kind.(HCP 14, LTC)
I have a client with dementia who has no other relatives. Because you see that sons and daughters of clients with dementia continue to visit. Sometimes a little less frequently, but they still visit. But this one client has no family. She has to rely on her neighbours for social contact. And you notice that they are quicker to say, well, sorry, but I’m not coming then.(HCP 25, home care)
Especially with people with poor hearing, I notice that you communicate less, maybe a little more detached, because of the face mask. Of course, there is the physical barrier of the mask, so they can’t read your lips. And that, of course, helps them understand others. And it also creates a kind of extra, semi-professional distance.(HCP 23, home care)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Home Care Setting | Long-Term Care Setting | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n | M [SD]/% | Range | n | M [SD]/% | Range | |
Family carers | ||||||
Age (years) | 9 | 65.3 [16.4] | 30–81 | 9 | 66.1 [13.1] | 43–84 |
% female | 4 | 40% | 6 | 60% | ||
Relation to person with dementia | 10 | 10 | ||||
| 7 3 | 70% 30% | 6 4 | 60% 40% | ||
Educational level | 10 | 10 | ||||
| 3 7 | 30% 70% | 1 9 | 10% 90% | ||
Type of dementia relative | 8 | 8 | ||||
| 7 1 | 87% 13% | 5 3 | 63% 37% | 3–30 | |
Time spent on caregiving tasks (hours a week) | 9 | 90.8 [71.5] | 7–168 | 10 | 13.5 [9.4] | |
Intensity of care compared to before pandemic | 4 | 7 | ||||
| 1 2 1 | 25% 50% 25% | 4 0 3 | 57% 0% 43% | ||
Healthcare professionals | 20–66 | |||||
Age (years) | 8 | 53.4 [9.2] | 34–64 | 10 | 49.4 [16.7] | |
% female | 6 | 60% | 8 | 80% | ||
Educational level | 9 | |||||
| 2 7 | 22% 78% | 9 1 | 90% 10% | 1–45 | |
Experience as a healthcare professional (years) | 9 | 16.3 [16.2] | 3–43 | 8 | 19.6 [17.1] | 4–70 |
Time spent on caregiving tasks (hours a week) | 10 | 35.1 [9.6] | 15–50 | 10 | 30.5 [16.8] | |
Intensity of care compared to before pandemic | 7 | 6 | ||||
| 0 4 3 | 0% 57% 43% | 0 1 5 | 0% 17% 85% |
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Smaling, H.J.A.; Tilburgs, B.; Achterberg, W.P.; Visser, M. The Impact of Social Distancing Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Dementia, Family Carers and Healthcare Professionals: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 519. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010519
Smaling HJA, Tilburgs B, Achterberg WP, Visser M. The Impact of Social Distancing Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Dementia, Family Carers and Healthcare Professionals: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(1):519. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010519
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmaling, Hanneke J. A., Bram Tilburgs, Wilco P. Achterberg, and Mandy Visser. 2022. "The Impact of Social Distancing Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Dementia, Family Carers and Healthcare Professionals: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1: 519. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010519
APA StyleSmaling, H. J. A., Tilburgs, B., Achterberg, W. P., & Visser, M. (2022). The Impact of Social Distancing Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Dementia, Family Carers and Healthcare Professionals: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(1), 519. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010519