The Support Priorities of Older Carers of People Living with Dementia: A Nominal Group Technique Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Ethics
2.5. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Prioritising the Carers’ Holistic Needs
“…what happens if I fell, your illness is second to that person (and it should be first), and it should be yes, cause you need be able to take care of them”.(Carer Group B)
“But I can only do it [attend dance events] when [partner living with dementia] goes in respite. I can’t do it … and yet I have been involved for 44 years, that’s how long I have been involved. And I used to go three times a week…”.(Carer Group B)
“My priority is respite…my partners in respite now and it does give me a rest”.(Carer Group B)
3.2. Having a Sense of Belonging
“We need groups to share our experiences”.(Carer Group A)
“…I want better liaison between the different services and organisations. Nobody seems to come together…they’re not talking between one another…”.(Carer Group B)
“So we can share experiences, so what I had in mind was something like today, so partners were cared for…”.(Carer Group A)
3.3. Support Which Is Accessible and Timely
“…what happens if I need to ring someone, who do I call… what happens if they [partner living with dementia] do fall”.(Carer Group B)
“And a hell of a lot more information. Don’t you agree [a different carer]?...They presume that you know. They presume that because you are the wife, or the husband, whichever the case may be, that you know what to do”.(Carer Group B)
“…make it obvious to a newly caring person what help is available…”.(Carer Group A)
“We need access to support and advice on practical matters i.e., wills, power of attorney etc.”.(Carer Group A)
“help in the home…once I’ve dragged her [partner living with dementia] downstairs from bed, I’ve had it, I can’t move. I need specialist help”.(Carer Group B)
3.4. Support to Meet the Wellbeing and Personhood of the Person Living with Dementia
“…we want advice on what to expect because we don’t know how things are going to progress until it happens and then we look it up and think oh yes…”.(Carer Group A)
“What matters most in the caring situation. So prioritising what the carers should look at as the most important things to do”.(Carer Group A)
“We need support filling in forms and understanding what support and funding is in place…we are stumbling in the dark…”.(Carer Group B)
“Having somewhere which provides a list of places we can go to and things we can do…like which are dementia friendly”.
“How much does a partner need love, friendship etc., even if they don’t communicate. How do we know they still don’t understand”.(Carer Group A)
3.5. Understanding and Training for the Wider Community
“Understanding from the management, from the top all the way down to the bottom to the helpers and carers…they need training”.(Carer Group B)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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NGT Group (A or B) | Participant ID | Gender | Age | Live with Person with Dementia | Gender of Person Living with Dementia | Age of Person Living with Dementia | Type of Dementia |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | Amy | Female | 74 | Yes | Male | 85 | Alzheimer’s disease |
A | Sophie | Female | 73 | Yes | Male | 81 | Alzheimer’s disease |
A | Maya | Female | 70 | Yes | Male | 71 | Alzheimer’s disease |
A | Jenny | Female | 78 | Yes | Male | 80 | Mixed dementia |
A | Sarah | Female | 78 | Yes | Male | 78 | Parkinson’s disease dementia |
B | Nina | Female | 79 | Yes | Male | 82 | Alzheimer’s disease |
B | Nathan | Male | 78 | Yes | Female | 76 | Alzheimer’s disease |
B | Hadrian | Male | 86 | Yes | Female | 83 | Mixed dementia |
B | Patricia | Female | 76 | Yes | Male | 79 | Vascular Dementia |
B | Constantine | Male | 69 | Yes | Female | 80 | Alzheimer’s disease |
B | Rhea | Female | 70 | Yes | Male | 73 | Parkinson’s disease dementia |
B | Eve | Female | 81 | Yes | Male | 83 | Vascular dementia |
Step Label | Step Procedure |
---|---|
Step 1. Introduction to NGT procedure and focus | At the start of each NGT, the authors shared and explained the NGT procedures and presented the research question participants considered: ‘What are your support priorities as a carer of a person living with dementia? |
Step 2. Initial idea development | Carers were provided with a pen and paper and instructed to individually and silently generate ideas of their support priorities and asked to list these on a piece of paper. |
Step 3. Round robin | In a round robin recording of ideas, each carer shared an item, in turn, until all carers had shared an item. This process was repeated until each carer had shared all items on their list. Carers were encouraged to avoid sharing items which they felt were the same as any already shared but to share items that they felt differed in any way. All items were simultaneously typed up by the authors and shared on a projector screen. |
Step 4. Clarification of items | The researchers the encouraged the whole group of participants to discuss each item on the list to clarify the wording and meaning and to remove and merge overlapping items [25]. A completed list, which was agreed upon by all participants, was then shared on the projector screen. |
Step 5. Individual ranking of items | Participants then individually and anonymously selected and ranked each of the items based on how important of a priority the item was to them. Rankings were based on a scale from 1 to 10, with 1 representing low priority and 10 representing high priority. Participants wrote their votes down on a piece of paper which was collected by the authors. |
Step 6. Ranking consensus and discussion | Rankings were then tabulated by the authors and the results were shared in the group on a screen. Finally, participants discussed their thoughts of the list and item order. |
List Ranking Position | Item | Overall Score | Mean Score | Identifying Code |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | How much does the partner still need love and friendship? Even if they do not communicate, how do we know? | 47 | 9.4 | A1 |
2 | Education on illness progression and how to plan for the future. | 44 | 8.8 | A2 |
3 | Communicating new treatment. | 38 | 7.6 | A3 |
3 | Day centre service and funding to facilitate time without caring responsibilities. | 38 | 7.6 | A4 |
4 | 1:1 contact in time of stress. Knowing who best to contact? e.g., an emergency number, not the police, ambulance, etc. | 36 | 7.2 | A5 |
5 | Group talks to share experiences. Care for person living with dementia to facilitate engagement. | 33 | 6.6 | A6 |
5 | Accessible and timely information and support (e.g., stair lifts, care homes, wills, power of attorney). | 33 | 6.6 | A7 |
6 | What should you prioritise in the day? | 29 | 5.8 | A8 |
List Ranking Position | Item | Overall Score | Mean Score | Identifying Code |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Support for understanding funding (e.g., filling in forms, access, care allowance) | 58 | 9.6 | B1 |
1 | Understanding and training for the wider community. Dementia-friendly community. | 58 | 9.6 | B2 |
2 | Being able to talk to a healthcare professional (without the person living with dementia present) | 55 | 9.1 | B3 |
3 | Prioritising the carer (e.g., identity, mental and physical health) | 54 | 9 | B4 |
3 | Sharing information of support groups between services and to carers | 54 | 9 | B5 |
4 | Information and support from professionals from the start of the process | 49 | 8.1 | B6 |
4 | Time without caring responsibilities (e.g., respite and sitting services) | 49 | 8.1 | B7 |
Theme Name | Brief Description | Item/s Informing the Theme |
---|---|---|
Prioritising the carers’ holistic needs | Prioritising services and organisations to prioritise their holistic needs alongside that of people living with dementia | A4, B3, B4, B7 |
Having a sense of belonging | Prioritising support groups which provide carers with a space to openly discuss their experiences | A6, B5 |
Support needs to be accessible and timely | Prioritising support that is ongoing and which carers can access at a time they need it | A5, A7, B6 |
Support to meet the wellbeing and personhood of the person living with dementia | Prioritising supports which better enabled carers to enhance the personhood and health of the person living with dementia (e.g., information to navigate funding) | A1, A2, A3, A8, B1 |
Understanding and training for the wider community | Prioritise improving understanding through training for those in the wider community to alleviate care concerns of going out into the community with the person living with dementia | B2 |
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Herron, D.; Runacres, J. The Support Priorities of Older Carers of People Living with Dementia: A Nominal Group Technique Study. Healthcare 2023, 11, 1998. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11141998
Herron D, Runacres J. The Support Priorities of Older Carers of People Living with Dementia: A Nominal Group Technique Study. Healthcare. 2023; 11(14):1998. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11141998
Chicago/Turabian StyleHerron, Daniel, and Jessica Runacres. 2023. "The Support Priorities of Older Carers of People Living with Dementia: A Nominal Group Technique Study" Healthcare 11, no. 14: 1998. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11141998
APA StyleHerron, D., & Runacres, J. (2023). The Support Priorities of Older Carers of People Living with Dementia: A Nominal Group Technique Study. Healthcare, 11(14), 1998. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11141998