Background and Objectives
This study tests the feasibility of using virtual reality (VR) with older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or mild-to-moderate dementia with a family member who lives at a distance.
Research Design and Methods
21 residents in a senior living community and a family member (who participated in the VR with the older adult from a distance) engaged in a baseline telephone call, followed by 3 weekly VR sessions.
Results
Residents and family members alike found the VR safe, extremely enjoyable, and easy to use. The VR was also acceptable and highly satisfying for residents with MCI and dementia. Human and automated coding revealed that residents were more conversationally and behaviorally engaged with their family member in the VR sessions compared to the baseline telephone call and in the VR sessions that used reminiscence therapy. The results also illustrate the importance of using multiple methods to assess engagement. Residents with dementia reported greater immersion in the VR than residents with MCI. However, the automated coding indicated that residents with MCI were more kinesically engaged while using the VR than residents with dementia.
Discussion and Implications
Combining networking and livestreaming features in a single VR platform can allow older adults in senior living communities to still travel, relive their past, and engage fully with life with their family members, despite geographical separation and physical and cognitive challenges.
The family is a complex and dynamic system. When change occurs, such as divorce; the creation of a new stepfamily; or having a child with cognitive, emotional, or physical challenges, that change affects the entire family. Across these transitions, as well as throughout daily life for many types of families, how adults in a family coparent with one another has a profound impact on the entire family's well-being. Coparenting involves efforts by each parent to support the other's parenting practices, the dynamic exchange of beliefs and expectations between the coparents about their caregiving for a child, and family management of roles and rules (Lamela et al., 2016). As Lamela et al. ( 2016) noted, "successful coparenting is not equivalent to the non-existence of overt and covert coparenting conflict, but also encompasses a proactive and cooperative coparenting alliance and a shared commitment to childrearing" (p. 717). Nevertheless, conflict can
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.