journal article Apr 17, 2013

Everyday activities for people with dementia in residential aged care: associations with person‐centredness and quality of life

View at Publisher Save 10.1111/opn.12030
Abstract
BackgroundProviding everyday activities is central to high quality residential aged care, but further research is needed on the association between activity participation, person‐centred care and quality of life.Aims and objectivesTo explore the point‐prevalence of participation in everyday activities for residents with dementia within a national sample of Swedish residential aged care units and to explore if residents participating in everyday activities lived in more person‐centred units and/or had higher quality of life as compared to residents not participating in everyday activities.Design and methodsA cross‐sectional design was used to collect valid and reliable questionnaire data on activity participation, unit person‐centredness and quality of life in a sample of residents in residential aged care (n = 1266).ResultsOnly 18% of residents participated in everyday activities such as making coffee, setting or clearing the table, cleaning or watering plants, 62% participated in outdoor walks, 27% participated in parlour games, and 14% and 13% participated in excursions and church visits, respectively. Those residents who had participated in everyday activities lived in more person‐centred units, had significantly higher quality of life and higher cognitive scores as compared to those residents who had not participated in everyday activities.ConclusionsEven though the prevalence of resident participation in everyday activities was low, resident participation was significantly associated with unit person‐centredness and resident quality of life. It seems that everyday activities that are routine and commonplace to residential aged care can be potent nursing interventions for promoting resident quality of life.Implications for practiceThe study indicates that residents can benefit from participation in everyday activities that are commonly occurring in aged care practice. It seems that such everyday tasks and procedures can provide fruitful ways to make person‐centred care happen in clinical practice, and ways to increasingly involve residents with cognitive impairment need to be further developed.
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Details
Published
Apr 17, 2013
Vol/Issue
9(4)
Pages
269-276
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Cite This Article
David Edvardsson, Lisa Petersson, Karin Sjogren, et al. (2013). Everyday activities for people with dementia in residential aged care: associations with person‐centredness and quality of life. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 9(4), 269-276. https://doi.org/10.1111/opn.12030