| Literature DB >> 25538123 |
Sharon Koehn1, Melissa Badger2, Carole Cohen3, Lynn McCleary4, Neil Drummond5.
Abstract
The 'Pathways to Diagnosis' study captured the experience of the prediagnosis period of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias through indepth interviews with 29 persons with dementia and 34 of their family caregivers across four sites: anglophones in Calgary, francophones in Ottawa, Chinese-Canadians in Greater Vancouver and Indo-Canadians in Toronto. In this cross-site analysis, we use the 'Candidacy' framework to comprehensively explore the challenges to securing a diagnosis of dementia in Canada and to develop relevant health and social policy. Candidacy views eligibility for appropriate medical care as a process of joint negotiation between individuals and health services, which can be understood relative to seven dimensions: identification of need, navigation, appearances at services, adjudication by providers, acceptance of/resistance to offers, permeability of services and local conditions. Interviewees experienced challenges relative to each of the seven dimensions and these varied in form and emphasis across the four ethno-linguistic groups.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Candidacy framework; dementia diagnosis; ethnocultural minority older adults; health policy; health services accessibility
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25538123 DOI: 10.1177/1471301214563551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dementia (London) ISSN: 1471-3012