2009
DOI: 10.1080/01621420802700952
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Formal Care Providers' Perceptions of Home- and Community-Based Services: Informing Dementia Care Quality

Abstract: Little attention has been given to the perceptions of formal care providers on the nature and quality of home- and community-based dementia care. The purpose of this descriptive interpretive research was to explore formal care providers' perceptions of their experiences with Canadian home- and community-based dementia care. Participants within three personal interviews and six focus groups (n = 41) included nurses, social workers, therapists, home care aides, and Alzheimer Society personnel (front line/managem… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(98 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…Lack of support for family caregivers [8–11], lack of recognition and poor working conditions of home support workers [12, 13], early hospital-to-home discharge policy [14], and poor system coordination [15] are examples of the challenges faced by persons living with dementia and their familial and formal caregivers. Furthermore, limited resources to implement and sustain a home care infrastructure [16] and a shift of chronic care to community settings without the corresponding transfer of funds [17] compound the difficulties encountered.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lack of support for family caregivers [8–11], lack of recognition and poor working conditions of home support workers [12, 13], early hospital-to-home discharge policy [14], and poor system coordination [15] are examples of the challenges faced by persons living with dementia and their familial and formal caregivers. Furthermore, limited resources to implement and sustain a home care infrastructure [16] and a shift of chronic care to community settings without the corresponding transfer of funds [17] compound the difficulties encountered.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…more than 200 could not find respite on three or more occasions, and 65 could not find respite on two occasions. Waiting for a needed service may strain existing caregiver capacity [10] , leading to burnout and use of emergency, acute and long-term care facilities [8] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To increase recipient satisfaction, family caregiver training should include frank discussion about roles and limitations of the respite provider. In addition, the state Respite Network has implemented Sharing the Care training programs for respite providers, building capacity within communities [8] . Training for providers includes responding to actual needs of caregivers within rules established by the program and requesting additional assistance when needed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Peu de données sont disponibles à cet égard. Le manque de temps, de formation, de ressources financières et humaines ainsi que les conflits relationnels avec la famille de l'aidé constituent les principales difficultés nommées par ces intervenants (Damasse et al, 2003 ;Éthier et Corbeil, 2003 ;Mackenzie et Peragine, 2003 ;Armstrong-Stassen et Cameron, 2005 ;Pitrou et al, 2006 ;Jansen et al, 2009 ; Institut national de prévention et d'éducation pour la santé (INPES), 2011). Bien que les baluchonneuses soient des intervenantes, au regard de leur rôle et responsabilité, leur position s'apparente souvent à celle des aidants familiaux.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified