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An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town

The disease trajectory that characterises dementia is one of progressive neuro-psychiatric, physical and cognitive decline. It is family members who often bear the brunt of the suffering that these sequential 'deaths' and losses bring. As they retain strong bonds, placement of loved ones in an insti...

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Main Author: Miller, Deborah Lee
Other Authors: Gwyther, Liz
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Health and Family Medicine 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Miller, Deborah Lee
author2 Gwyther, Liz
author_browse Gwyther, Liz
Miller, Deborah Lee
author_facet Gwyther, Liz
Miller, Deborah Lee
author_sort Miller, Deborah Lee
collection Thesis
description The disease trajectory that characterises dementia is one of progressive neuro-psychiatric, physical and cognitive decline. It is family members who often bear the brunt of the suffering that these sequential 'deaths' and losses bring. As they retain strong bonds, placement of loved ones in an institution is often seen as the ultimate act of betrayal resulting in ongoing guilt. How families perceive care given in these homes, the relationships they form with staff and the new roles they take depends on multiple variables. Although this has been the subject of some studies in the USA, UK and Europe, there is at yet no research on this phenomenon in South Africa and Africa as a whole. This study utilised Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to explore the experience of 10 family members of 8 patients with moderately severe to severe dementia in 5 different old age homes in Cape Town. IPA seeks to give a credible account of the interpretation of the person's experience, by using a deeper analysis whilst remaining firmly anchored in the participants account. The analysis and discussion of this study were conducted by the primary researcher and corroborated by an independent Social Worker experienced in psychoanalysis. The discussion was integrated with the literature review to enhance validity and place this research within the context of broader research on the subject. Analysis of emergent themes revealed that family members enter old age homes with a prior agenda shaped by their experiences prior to admission. Home placement is an extremely traumatic event and carries with it an ongoing heavy burden of guilt. The unwillingness or inability of medical professionals to provide information significantly increases that burden. Perceptions of how staff and administrators may think or function are often negative and distrustful and may well be misconceived. None the less they are believed to be true and heavily influence the integration of families into the home in either a positive or negative way. Old racial divides entrenched during Apartheid still hold sway and influence reactions towards and from nursing staff. Ultimately families still seek to play an active role in their loved ones lives and to seek purpose in their relationships.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14258 An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town Miller, Deborah Lee Gwyther, Liz Palliative Medicine The disease trajectory that characterises dementia is one of progressive neuro-psychiatric, physical and cognitive decline. It is family members who often bear the brunt of the suffering that these sequential 'deaths' and losses bring. As they retain strong bonds, placement of loved ones in an institution is often seen as the ultimate act of betrayal resulting in ongoing guilt. How families perceive care given in these homes, the relationships they form with staff and the new roles they take depends on multiple variables. Although this has been the subject of some studies in the USA, UK and Europe, there is at yet no research on this phenomenon in South Africa and Africa as a whole. This study utilised Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to explore the experience of 10 family members of 8 patients with moderately severe to severe dementia in 5 different old age homes in Cape Town. IPA seeks to give a credible account of the interpretation of the person's experience, by using a deeper analysis whilst remaining firmly anchored in the participants account. The analysis and discussion of this study were conducted by the primary researcher and corroborated by an independent Social Worker experienced in psychoanalysis. The discussion was integrated with the literature review to enhance validity and place this research within the context of broader research on the subject. Analysis of emergent themes revealed that family members enter old age homes with a prior agenda shaped by their experiences prior to admission. Home placement is an extremely traumatic event and carries with it an ongoing heavy burden of guilt. The unwillingness or inability of medical professionals to provide information significantly increases that burden. Perceptions of how staff and administrators may think or function are often negative and distrustful and may well be misconceived. None the less they are believed to be true and heavily influence the integration of families into the home in either a positive or negative way. Old racial divides entrenched during Apartheid still hold sway and influence reactions towards and from nursing staff. Ultimately families still seek to play an active role in their loved ones lives and to seek purpose in their relationships. 2015-10-19T07:46:51Z 2015-10-19T07:46:51Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14258 eng application/pdf Department of Public Health and Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Palliative Medicine
Miller, Deborah Lee
An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town
title_full An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town
title_fullStr An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town
title_short An exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in Cape Town
title_sort exploration of family members perceptions of palliative care given to dementia patients and their families in old age homes in cape town
topic Palliative Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14258
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