Navigating the Impacts of Dementia: The Experience of Male Spousal Carers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Recruitment and Sample
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Limitations
3. Results
3.1. Making Sense of the Condition
I explain to people what it is. I think of it as the lotto on the telly where the balls go round and then one drops out and all the numbers are mixed up and then all of a sudden they just flash and it’s ‘one, two, three, four’, whatever. I think that’s what’s happening in there and it’s just trying to work out how.(Keith)
So really it’s just virtually live each day as it, you know, as it comes really; because you don’t know where you’re going to be. There’s no sort of, er, it’s like if you’ve got cancer, they turn around and say, oh, well you’ve got six months to live or something like that, there’s nothing like that and nobody knows how it’s going to progress, so you’ve just got to go with what you’ve got.(Stuart)
We’ve both got enough experience in life sort of thing you know to put up with what’s thrown at us and when she got diagnosed we sat and talked about it for months before telling the kids or anything like that you know and we do, we laugh and joke. Okay, people, if they don’t like it, well that’s tough, we have a dance in the kitchen, we do don’t we, and it’s brought us so much closer together you know.(Liam)
I didn’t always have patience as Emma said. When we, when we didn’t know what was causing our arguments over stupid things, I didn’t realise part of it was, was the Alzheimer’s, but having found out that that’s what it was and to be more understanding, I mean, that’s what you have to do.(Nick)
The other area which I’m now a number one professional, if you like, which is, I wouldn’t have known where to start, six months ago, I do err the washing, put the washing machine on, dryer on, etc.(Giles)
So you know, I just feel incompetent to deal with it, because I just don’t know what to do. I mean there’s plenty of people offering help, but when it comes to taking it, where do you go?(Norman)
3.2. Treating Dementia as a Problem to Be Solved
Souvenaid, it’s a one a day drink, and apparently it had been medically tested and so many people that have tried it claimed that the, it may have slowed the process down a little bit, somewhat. Some reported different reactions on their speech and their memory, and whatever. So I thought, “Right, we’ll give it a go.” […] I found the company and then I got it on the internet. And I ordered it through the internet because you couldn’t, it was not on prescription. And it was £200 and, there was £50 off if you got three boxes.(Geoff)
I’ve got this thing called, “The End of Alzheimer’s”, book, which my son, in conversation says, “It’s not proven”, but as I said to him “Well if we do some of the things that are in that book, and it doesn’t do us any harm, err what have we lost?”(Giles)
What I don’t understand is why they don’t seem to want to help other than a basic tablet […] but why they don’t tell you, are these possibilities? Even if they aren’t, they don’t work, but I think you should be told, and a lot of things in, in this book are about checking your balances of certain vitamins and things which may affect, may affect Alzheimer’s.(Giles)
We’ve got friends and their husbands can’t cope with them and they say, “Yes sir, no sir, three bags full sir”. Now I won’t let that happen, I’m a bugger, I just won’t let it. I want her to get better you see. I keep pushing and pushing.(Keith)
She always has been stubborn and I think two things, at first she was stubborn because it was frustration and she didn’t know what to do and how to go about it and she wouldn’t listen, she wouldn’t learn and everything else. All that has all kind of gone and now because she wants to get better so it’s a go-go, I think anyway because you do don’t you? […] We want to get our lives back don’t we?(Keith)
It’s two words, it’s understanding and patience. It’s very hard, I, I would be honest with you it’s very hard to have the patience, but that’s what it is, that’s what caring is, it’s having patience to try and look after people, trying to understand which I will never understand because I ain’t got it, you know, you know, it’s impossible for me to understand, just to do your best to understand.(Nick)
3.3. Engaging with Professionals and Support
Not really, because he didn’t tell us anything about it you know, “Take these tablets”, he didn’t say what they were for, and then they stopped them, and they didn’t tell us why they stopped them. I mean I don’t know what tests you can do to test for dementia.(Mark)
I think one of the problems when they come out, it’s, the, the questions are the same as what they’ve asked before, which Fiona already knows the, the differences that they, they go back on the dates and everything, and backwards and that. […] they’ll say, I mean the, the one girl turned around and said “You’re doing remarkedly well Fiona”, but they don’t see the other side.(Geoff)
Oh, don’t talk to me about support groups. I’ve been to two or three of them and I find there’s people telling me what to do that have never had to do it themselves.(Norman)
Being a carer, I’m sure you’ve been told it before, it’s very lonely existence. People, just the two of them together, who haven’t got an outside family or friends, good friends. So all we do is talk. We talk for two hours and laugh and joke and there’s not many come, about eight people come.(Nick)
If you want advice, they are willing to give you advice and that’s what I like. It’s not swept under the carpet. We need to know more about it; we need to know how to cope.(Keith)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name | Age | Occupation | Length of Relationship (Years) | Partner’s Condition | Severity of Partner’s Condition | Time since Diagnosis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stuart | 73 | Haulage | 43 | Alzheimer’s | Mild | 2 years |
Norman | 80 | Teacher | 58 | Vascular | Moderate | 1 year |
Geoff | 69 | Skilled manual | 47 | Frontotemporal | Mild | 2 years |
Steve | 62 | Skilled manual | 40 | Alzheimer’s | Mild | 4 years |
Nick | 72 | Sales | 48 | Alzheimer’s | Mild | 9 years |
Mark | 86 | Skilled manual | 5 | Alzheimer’s | Mild | 7 months |
Keith | 74 | Haulage | 54 | Alzheimer’s | Mild | 1 month |
Liam | 66 | Skilled manual | 23 | Alzheimer’s | Mild | 3 years |
Giles | 71 | Accountant | 36 | Alzheimer’s | Moderate | 3 months |
Roger | 67 | Security | 20 | Alzheimer’s | Moderate | 4 years |
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Tolhurst, E.; Weicht, B. Navigating the Impacts of Dementia: The Experience of Male Spousal Carers. Healthcare 2023, 11, 2492. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11182492
Tolhurst E, Weicht B. Navigating the Impacts of Dementia: The Experience of Male Spousal Carers. Healthcare. 2023; 11(18):2492. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11182492
Chicago/Turabian StyleTolhurst, Edward, and Bernhard Weicht. 2023. "Navigating the Impacts of Dementia: The Experience of Male Spousal Carers" Healthcare 11, no. 18: 2492. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11182492
APA StyleTolhurst, E., & Weicht, B. (2023). Navigating the Impacts of Dementia: The Experience of Male Spousal Carers. Healthcare, 11(18), 2492. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11182492