Abstract

BackgroundThe coming years will see more persons with dementia living longer at home. However, “the home” is a complex concept with a multitude of meanings, varying among individuals and raising ethical and practical dilemmas in the support provided for this group. This study aims to increase the understanding of experiences and attitudes among persons with dementia related to living at home.MethodsQualitative interviews were conducted with 12 persons, 69 to 89 years old, with a dementia diagnosis and living at home. Using a hermeneutical approach, the interviews were analysed as single texts, as parts of a set of texts and as a whole single text. The writings of care philosopher Kari Martinsen on “The home” were chosen as a framework for the theoretical interpretation of the findings.ResultsThe participants experienced a vital interconnectedness between the home and their lives, placing their home as a core foundation for life. Through stories of persisting love, they illuminated how their lived lives functioned as a foundation for their homes. Further, they described how progressing dementia disturbed rhythms of life at home, forcing them to adapt and change their routines and rhythms in life. Finally, in the hope of an enhanced future home the participants showed an acceptance of, but also a reluctance to, the prospect of having to move out of their homes at some future point.ConclusionThe study suggests that the participants’ home generated existential meaning for the participating persons with dementia. Their experience of being at home was based on a variety of individual factors working together in various ways. These findings imply a need to understand what factors are important for the individual, as well as how these factors interact in order to provide support for this group of people.

Highlights

  • The coming years will see more persons with dementia living longer at home

  • Exploring the participants’ experiences of living at home with dementia we found that living with dementia progressively required adjustments and caused disturbed rhythms in life at home

  • The participants revealed how their lived life served as a foundation for their home

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Summary

Introduction

The coming years will see more persons with dementia living longer at home. This study aims to increase the understanding of experiences and attitudes among persons with dementia related to living at home. Economic, and emotional consequences for the people who live with it, for their families and for the health systems that support them [1]. Many persons with dementia live in their own home, which is recognized as a. Many persons with dementia are institutionalized contrary to their own wishes to stay at home [1] and often nursing home admission represents a demarcation as “the beginning of the end” [6]. This research indicates that individuals living with dementia may experience that “lived space” diminishes over time, while dementia progresses

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