| Literature DB >> 28588424 |
Vigdis Abrahamsen Grøndahl1, Mona Persenius2, Carina Bååth2, Ann Karin Helgesen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dementia is an important predictor of nursing home admissions. Due to progressive dementia symptoms, over time it becomes difficult for persons with dementia to communicate their wishes and participate in decisions concerning their everyday lives. Their well-being, sense of dignity, integrity and personhood are at risk. The persons' life stories have been highlighted as particularly important in dementia care and are referred to as seeing the person beyond the dementia. The aim of this study was to explore and describe the use of life stories and its influence on persons with dementia living in nursing homes, their relatives and staff.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Life stories; Nursing home; Systematic mixed studies review
Year: 2017 PMID: 28588424 PMCID: PMC5457564 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-017-0223-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the selection process. Source: modified version of flow diagram as reported by Moher et al. [44]
Characteristics of included studies and quality assessment
| Authors/Country | Title | Aim | Design | Research type | Sample, including participants’ characteristics | Intervention | Outcome | Summary of relevant findings | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buron 2010 [ | Life history collages. Effects on nursing home staff caring for residents with dementia. | To compare changes in nursing staff knowledge of individual residents and their perceptions of knowing the person, staff- to- resident, communication, and staff –to-staff communication before and after exposure to life history collages. | A pilot study. A pretest-posttest, quasi-experimental design. | Quantitative | A convenience sample of five residents with dementia (3 intervention, 2 control) and 36 nursing staff members (18 intervention, 18 control), resident in two nursing homes. Person with dementia: Age: 63–95 years Gender: 1 woman and 4 men Length of stay: 10–11 months MMSE score: 1–11 | Interviews with each resident’s surrogate were conducted and tangible (e.g., photos) and intangible (e.g., verbal description) information about each resident in three areas were collected: family, job/careers and likes/dislikes/interests. A graphic design artist used the information to create the essence of each resident’s participant’s life in the form of a life history collage that were placed on the residents’ room walls for a period of 4 weeks. | Nursing staff knowledge - author developed questionnaire | The intervention group members’ knowledge of residents’ family, job/careers, and likes/dislikes/interests improved significantly at posttest and at 3 weeks post intervention. The perceptions of individualized care/person centered care practices did not improve significantly. | Medium |
| Haight, Gibson, Michel 2006 [ | The Northern Ireland life review/life storybook project for people with dementia. | To test the effectiveness of a structured life review/life storybook process. | A controlled pilot study. Pre- and posttest. | Quantitative | A convenience sample of 30 older people (15 intervention, 15 control) who had mild to moderate dementia, resident in six assisted-living facilities. Person with dementia: Age: 60–99 years Gender: 25 women and 6 men | A series of semistructured interviews guided by the tool The Life Review and Experiencing Form (LREF) was conducted during 8 weeks. A life storybook was constructed by care staff and the participants in dyads. The life storybook was an illustrated loose-leaf binder with photographs and explanatory captions by using the elderly person’s own words. | The participants | Significant differences between experimental and control groups were found in 4 out of 6 measures: cognition, depression, positive mood and communication. | Medium |
| Kellett, Moyle, McAllister, King, Gallagher 2010 [ | Life stories and biography: a means of connecting family and staff to people with dementia. | To assess the Family Biography Workshop (FBW) designed to support family and staff to co- construct the history of the person with dementia in residential care. | A pilot study. Focus group interviews. | Qualitative | A purposeful sample of seven family careers and their relatives in care, seven care staff and one researcher in long term dementia care. | The FBW process consisting of a series of six weekly two-hour sessions, involved families and staff completing a set of exercises designed to help them build a biography of the life of the person with dementia. Between the sessions, incrementally, both family members and staff shared biographical materials with the residents, and thus, involving the person with dementia. | Family-staff caregiver | For family caregivers “standing outside” four characteristics: freeing the family from the present, breaking free of the disease-saturated narrative, gaining insight into grieving and healing and learning something about my relative not previously appreciated, were found. | Medium |
| McKeown, Clarke, Ingleton, Ryan, Repper 2010 [ | The use of life story work with people with dementia to enhance person-centred care. | To explore the use of taking a Life Story Work (LSW) approach with people with dementia. To investigate the ways in which LSW: | A multiple case study. Conversations, observations, interviews, and documentary analysis. | Qualitative | A purposeful sample of four people with dementia across four care settings for people with dementia, 12 multi-professional staff and three relatives. | A practice development approach with six key themes was applied to the LSW intervention. Participant were given the opportunity to develop the use of LSW in whichever way they choose; encouraging the use of creativity in practice. Three cases developed a life story book and one a pen picture. | Person-centered outcomes | Using LSW can enhance person-centred care. Three main themes: “from patient to person”, “can you hear me?” and “pride and enjoyment”, were found. | Medium |
| McKeown, Ryan, Ingleton, Clarke | ‘You have to be mindful of whose story it is’: the challenges of undertaking life story work with people with dementia and their family carers. | To critically appraise some of the challenges that may emerge through the process of undertaking Life story work (LSW). | A multiple case study. | Qualitative | A sample of four people with dementia across four care settings for people with dementia, 12 multi-professional staff and three relatives. | A practice development approach with eight principles was applied to the life story work intervention. Three cases developed a life story book and one a pen picture. | Experiences of people with dementia, family careers and care staff in using life story work. | Several challenges may occur during the process of undertaking LSW. Four main themes “personal disclosures”, “whose story is it?”, “quality of life story books”, and “under and overuse of life story books”, were found. | Medium |
| Subramaniam,Woods, Whitaker 2014 [ | Life review and life story books for people with mild to moderate dementia: a randomised controlled trial. | To evaluate the effect of different pathways for developing a life story book (LSB) for people with dementia. | A preliminary, randomized single blind controlled trial, with two parallel arms | Quantitative | A sequential individual-based randomization sample of 23 people with dementia (11 intervention, 12 control) living in 11 care homes participated, 23 relatives and 68 care staff. | Life review /life story book intervention. | The persons with dementia: Primary outcome: | For persons with dementia: A significant between-group difference was found immediately after the life review session had been completed in favor of LSB group. No differences in quality of life between the LSB intervention and the LSB as gift intervention groups were found six weeks after receiving the LSB. For both groups QOL-AD had improved. At 12-week assessment, there was a significant improvement in scores for the LSB group compared with the LSB as a gift group. | High |