Supporting autonomy for people with dementia living in nursing homes: A rapid realist review.
Publication year
2023Source
International Journal of Nursing Studies, 137, (2023), pp. 104382, article 104382ISSN
Annotation
01 januari 2023
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
Display more detailsDisplay less details
Organization
Primary and Community Care
Journal title
International Journal of Nursing Studies
Volume
vol. 137
Page start
p. 104382
Subject
Radboudumc 18: Healthcare improvement science 18-Primary and Community Care; Radboudumc 1: Alzheimer`s disease DCMN: Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience; Radboud University Medical Center; Radboudumc 18: Healthcare improvement science Primary and Community CareAbstract
BACKGROUND: For people with dementia living in nursing homes, autonomy is important. However, they experience difficulty with being heard as an autonomous person, as well as with expressing their preferences and choices. The question is how to support their autonomy. OBJECTIVE: Despite extensive efforts to support autonomy in daily care for people with dementia living in nursing homes, we do not know exactly what works for whom, in which context, how and why. The objective of this realist review is to explore what is known in literature on autonomy support interventions for people with dementia in nursing homes. DESIGN: A rapid realist review of literature. REVIEW METHODS: To understand how autonomy is supported, a realist approach was applied that entailed identifying the research question, searching for information, performing a quality appraisal, extracting data, synthesizing the evidence and validating the findings with a panel of experts. Causal assumptions were derived from articles found in four bibliographic databases (PubMed, PsychInfo, Cochrane and CINAHL) leading to context (C)-mechanism (M)-outcome (O) configurations. RESULTS: Data extraction from the included articles ultimately resulted in sixteen CMO configurations on four themes: a. preferences and choice: interventions for supporting autonomy in nursing homes and their results, b. personal characteristics of residents and family: people with dementia and their family being individuals who have their own character, habits and behaviors, c. competent nursing staff each having their own level of knowledge, competence and need for support, and d. interaction and relationships in care situations: the persons involved are interrelated, continuously interacting in different triangles composed of residents, family members and nursing staff. CONCLUSION: The findings showed that results from interventions on autonomy in daily-care situations are likely to be just as related not only with the characteristics and competences of the people involved, but also to how they interact. Autonomy support interventions appear to be successful when the right context factors are considered.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243908]
- Electronic publications [130674]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92803]
- Open Access publications [104963]
Upload full text
Use your RU credentials (u/z-number and password) to log in with SURFconext to upload a file for processing by the repository team.