| Literature DB >> 26060403 |
Aud Johannessen1, Knut Engedal1, Kirsten Thorsen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Limited research exists on the development and needs of children of parents with young-onset dementia (YOD) (<65 years old). There is scarce knowledge of how these children experience the situation of growing up with a parent with dementia. This study investigates the stories of children of persons with YOD and interprets their metaphorical expressions of their experiences as a source of understanding their situation and needs during the development and course of their parent's dementia.Entities:
Keywords: adult children; early-onset dementia; experiences; metaphors; services; support
Year: 2015 PMID: 26060403 PMCID: PMC4454217 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S84069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Characteristics of the adult children and their parent with YOD
| The adult child
| The parent with YOD
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relationship | Siblings | Household | Relationship | Household |
| Daughter | Two half siblings | Living at parental home | Father | Married |
| Daughter | Two siblings | Living alone | Mother | Widow |
| Daughter | Five siblings | Living alone | Mother | Divorced |
| Daughter | Two siblings | Cohabitation | Mother | Widow |
| Daughter | Two siblings | Married | Mother | Married |
| Daughter | None | Cohabitation | Mother | Divorced |
| Daughter | One sibling | Cohabitation | Father | Married |
| Daughter | One sibling | Married | Father | Divorced |
| Daughter | One sibling | Cohabitation | Father | Married |
| Son | Three siblings | Living at parental home | Father | Married |
| Son | One sibling | Living with his mother | Father | Divorced |
| Son | Three siblings | Living with his sister | Father | Married |
| Son | One sibling, two half siblings | Cohabitation | Father | Married |
| Son | None | Living alone | Father | Married |
Notes:
Do not live together in the same household;
lived together with the parent when the first signs of dementia were revealed or the diagnosis was made;
have their own children;
the parent is married again.
Abbreviation: YOD, young-onset dementia.
Questions/themes in the interviews of the adult children of a parent with YOD
| • How was it during those years and how is it now for you to have a parent with YOD? |
| • How has this disease affected your life in the different stages of the disorder? |
| • How has the disorder affected your family and the relationships within the family, and among your friends in the different stages of the disorder? |
| • When you look back, is it possible for you to describe something that has been/could have been of help to you or your family during the different stages of the disorder? |
| • What kind of support have you received, do you receive, or you are in need of today? |
| • Have you had to make decisions for your parent with YOD, and if so, how has that been? |
Abbreviation: YOD, young-onset dementia.