Needs of Older People Attending Day Care Centres in Poland
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Survey
- (1)
- welfare services and specialist welfare services, defined as support in meeting daily life needs and, as long as it is possible, ensuring contacts with the environment. The welfare services and specialist services include, among other things, occupational therapy (including music therapy, art therapy, dance movement therapy, ergotherapy, etc.), cognitive training, support in personal or administrative issues; specialist welfare services should be adjusted to the specific needs related to an affliction or disability, and they are provided by qualified specialists;
- (2)
- care and hygienic services are connected with providing access to the equipment improving personal hygiene (i.e., shower, washing machine, etc.); monitoring blood pressure, sugar level and weight; registered nurse’s services (e.g., help in dividing and administering drugs); and care activities like help in maintaining personal hygiene, taking care of appearance and cleanliness at person’s home, help in washing, taking baths and getting dressed;
- (3)
- preventive services that encompass meeting the health needs established through the contact with health care providers like nurses, psychologists, physiotherapists that may improve mobility (e.g., through movement classes in a broad sense, kinesiotherapy) as well as educational activities and lectures conducted by invited guests, e.g., medical practitioners (doctors, nurses, physiotherapists) and health care specialists;
- (4)
- supportive actions described as facilitating meeting social, cultural, recreational (games, plays) tourism (organising leisure activities and trip), needs, e.g., participation in cultural events;
- (5)
- and other ones, that is services provided outside the above-mentioned main categories, i.e., computer classes, foreign language learning, access to the library and current press, ensuring transportation of the attendees from the place of residence to the day care centre and back, classes for informal caretakers (mostly support groups) as well as delivering meals to the place of residence of persons who do not avail themselves of the remaining part of the offer of the day care centre.
2.3. Cluster Randomisation
2.4. Participants
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the Studied Group
3.2. Needs within the Scope of the Services of Day Care Centres
3.2.1. Assessment of Provided Services among All Study Participants
3.2.2. Assessment of Provided Services among Participants Using Day Care Centres in Different Polish Cities
3.2.3. Significance of Provided Services
3.2.4. Attendees’ Needs
3.2.5. Limitations in Attending Day Care Centres
3.2.6. Motivation to Attend Day Care Centres
3.2.7. Potential Met Needs from the Perspective of the Attendees of Day Care Centres
3.2.8. Open Questions
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Feature | All Respondents (n = 269) | |
---|---|---|
age | 74 (± 11) | |
No answer n = 24 (9%) | ||
sex | Women | 164 (61%) |
Men | 98 (36%) | |
No answer | 7 (3%) | |
education | Primary | 59 (22%) |
Vocational | 81 (30%) | |
Upper secondary | 100 (37%) | |
Higher | 15 (6%) | |
No answer | 14 (5%) | |
marital status | Single | 52 (19%) |
Married | 29 (11%) | |
Widow/widower | 136 (51%) | |
Divorced | 32 (12%) | |
Informal relationship | 6 (2%) | |
Other | 4 (1%) | |
No answer | 10 (4%) | |
previously practised profession | White-collar worker | 63 (23%) |
Blue-collar worker | 86 (32%) | |
Worker performing both manual and non-manual work | 33 (12%) | |
Never worked | 9 (3%) | |
No answer | 77 (29%) | |
obtained type of pension | Pension | 176 (65%) |
Disability pension | 60 (22%) | |
Other | 20 (7%) | |
No answer | 13 (5%) | |
place of residence | City above 300 thousand | 181 (67%) |
City between 100–300 thousand | 43 (16%) | |
City below 100 thousand | 27 (10%) | |
Village | 1 (0.4%) | |
No answer | 17 (6%) | |
time of using day care centre services | More than 5 years | 129 (48%) |
More than 2 years | 59 (22%) | |
1–2 years | 38 (14%) | |
Half a year—year | 17 (6%) | |
Less than half a year | 16 (6%) | |
No answer | 10 (4%) | |
availability of day care centres 1 | Very good | 99 (37%) |
Good | 76 (28%) | |
Mediocre | 41 (15%) | |
Bad | 14 (5%) | |
Very bad | 2 (1%) | |
No answer | 32 (14%) |
Missing Service | Wrocław | Bytom | Łódź |
---|---|---|---|
Occupational therapy | 5 (3%) | 3 (1.8%) | 2 (3.7%) |
Memory trainings | 13 (8%) | 16 (26.6%) | 10 (18.5%) |
Help in organising personal matters | 13 (8%) | 8 (13%) | 6 (11%) |
Meal | 9 (5.8%) | 5 (8%) | 0 |
Shower | 29 (18.7%) | 15 (25%) | 17 (31%) |
RR test, body mass measurement, glucose testing | 22 (14%) | 12 (20%) | 6 (11%) |
Care | 26 (16.7%) | 8 (13%) | 8 (14.8%) |
Support in medication | 16 (10%) | 6 (10%) | 5 (9%) |
Meetings | 3 (1.9%) | 7 (11%) | 3 (5.5%) |
Going out | 3 (1.9%) | 5 (8%) | 2 (3.7%) |
Educational classes | 6 (3.8%) | 9 (15%) | 1 (1.8%) |
Other | 11 (7%) | 6 (10%) | 0 |
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Mazurek, J.; Szcześniak, D.; Trypka, E.; Lion, K.M.; Wallner, R.; Rymaszewska, J. Needs of Older People Attending Day Care Centres in Poland. Healthcare 2020, 8, 310. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8030310
Mazurek J, Szcześniak D, Trypka E, Lion KM, Wallner R, Rymaszewska J. Needs of Older People Attending Day Care Centres in Poland. Healthcare. 2020; 8(3):310. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8030310
Chicago/Turabian StyleMazurek, Justyna, Dorota Szcześniak, Elżbieta Trypka, Katarzyna Małgorzata Lion, Renata Wallner, and Joanna Rymaszewska. 2020. "Needs of Older People Attending Day Care Centres in Poland" Healthcare 8, no. 3: 310. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8030310
APA StyleMazurek, J., Szcześniak, D., Trypka, E., Lion, K. M., Wallner, R., & Rymaszewska, J. (2020). Needs of Older People Attending Day Care Centres in Poland. Healthcare, 8(3), 310. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8030310