| Literature DB >> 35773080 |
Sophie N Gaber1,2, Liv Thalén1, Camilla W Malinowsky1, Isabel Margot-Cattin1,3, Kishore Seetharaman4, Habib Chaudhury4, Malcolm Cutchin5, Sarah Wallcook1, Anders Kottorp1,6, Anna Brorsson1, Samantha Biglieri7, Louise Nygård1.
Abstract
There is limited empirical knowledge about how older adults living with dementia enact their social citizenship through out-of-home participation. This study aimed: (a) to investigate out-of-home participation among older adults with and without dementia in four countries and (b) to compare aspects of stability or change in out-of-home participation. Using a cross-sectional design, older adults with mild-to-moderate dementia and without dementia, aged 55 years and over, were interviewed using the Participation in ACTivities and Places OUTside the Home questionnaire in Canada (n = 58), Sweden (n = 69), Switzerland (n = 70), and the United Kingdom (n = 128). Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and a two-way analysis of variance. After adjustment for age, diagnosis of dementia and country of residence had significant effects on total out-of-home participation (p < .01). The results contribute to policies and development of programs to facilitate social citizenship by targeting specific activities and places.Entities:
Keywords: dementia-friendly communities; international; neighborhood; neurodegenerative diseases; outdoor environment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35773080 PMCID: PMC9561802 DOI: 10.1177/07334648221112425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Gerontol ISSN: 0733-4648
Overview of the Contextual Characteristics of the Sample of Older Adults Living With and Without Dementia in the Four Participating Countries.
| Variable | Category | Canada | Sweden | Switzerland | UK (England) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Data collection regions | Vancouver | Stockholm region | French speaking regions of western Switzerland | Cumbria, Greater Manchester, London (North East, South West London) region | |
| Data collection environments | Urban/suburban | 58 (100%) | 30 (44.12%) | 17 (24.29%) | 98 (76.56%) |
| Rural/semi-rural | 0 (0%) | 38 (55.88%) | 53 (75.71%) | 30 (23.44%) | |
| Recruitment settings for older adults living with dementia | Older adults living with dementia | Memory clinics | Memory clinics and open, community-based settings | Memory clinics | National Health care Service (NHS) including memory clinics |
| Older adults living without dementia | Senior centers | Community-based leisure and social groups and senior centers | Senior associations | Community-based leisure and social groups and senior centers | |
| National public transport services | British Columbia transportation system offers public transportation concessions and a bus pass for older adults (65+) | Public transportation concessions for older adults (65+) | Reductions for seniors in some communes, free pass for older adults | Nationwide Free older person’s bus pass and regional public transportation concessions, that is, the London Freedom Pass for older adults and/or disabled persons | |
| National dementia population | 432,010 (1.19%) | 168,243 (1.66%) | 137,344 (1.62%) | 1,031,396 (1.56%) | |
| National dementia strategy | A Dementia Strategy for Canada: Together We Aspire (2019) | Swedish National Guidelines on Dementia (2017), and the Swedish National Dementia Strategy (2018) | Swiss National Dementia Strategy (2013), evaluation (2016), and Dementia Platform (2019) | National Dementia Strategy for England: Living well with dementia (2009), the revised implementation programme (2012), and the Prime Minister’s Challenge on Dementia (2015) |
Notes. Missing data: Data collection environments (1 older adults living with dementia in the Swedish sample). National dementia population statistics (Sweden, Switzerland, UK) according to Alzheimer Europe (2020); National dementia population statistics (Canada) according to the Public Health Agency of Canada (2018).
Background Characteristics of the Sample (n = 325).
| Variable | Category | Sub-sample of older adults
living with dementia ( | Sub-sample of older adults
living without dementia ( | Test statistic | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count | % | Median | IQR | Count | % | Median | IQR | ||||
| Sex | Male | 79 | 48.77 | 65 | 39.88 | 2.6 | NS[ | ||||
| Female | 83 | 51.23 | 98 | 60.12 | |||||||
| Age group | ≤64 years | 11 | 6.96 | 28 | 17.18 | 10.63 | NS[ | ||||
| 65–74 years | 50 | 31.65 | 59 | 36.2 | |||||||
| 75–84 years | 71 | 44.94 | 56 | 34.36 | |||||||
| ≥85 years | 26 | 16.46 | 20 | 12.27 | |||||||
| Level of education | Primary and/or secondary school | 35 | 21.88 | 22 | 13.5 | 6.96 | NS[ | ||||
| High school/GED/Apprenticeship | 84 | 52.5 | 80 | 49.08 | |||||||
| Degree from university/college | 41 | 25.63 | 61 | 37.42 | |||||||
| Living conditions | Alone | 60 | 37.01 | 83 | 50.92 | 6.36 | NS[ | ||||
| Co-habiting | 102 | 62.96 | 80 | 49.08 | |||||||
| Supporting person available | No | 9 | 5.66 | 44 | 27.16 | 26.91 | <.001[ | ||||
| Yes | 150 | 94.34 | 118 | 72.84 | |||||||
| Driving car yourself | No | 120 | 74.07 | 62 | 38.04 | 42.82 | <.001[ | ||||
| Yes | 42 | 25.93 | 101 | 61.96 | |||||||
| Transportation service | No | 120 | 74.53 | 152 | 93.25 | 21.06 | <.001[ | ||||
| Yes | 41 | 25.47 | 11 | 6.75 | |||||||
| MoCA | Score (0–30) | 20 | 16–22 | 26 | 24.50–28 | 1224.5 | <.001[ | ||||
| MMSE | Score (0–30) | 21 | 19–22.75 | 29 | 28–30 | .0 | <.001[ | ||||
Notes. GED: General Educational Development exam; IQR: Interquartile range; MMSE: Mini-Mental State Examination (for the Canadian sample); MoCA: Montreal Cognitive Assessment (for the Swedish, Swiss, and UK samples); NS: non-statistically significant difference.
aAnalyzed with Pearson’s χ2.
bAnalyzed with the Mann–Whitney U test. Missing data: Age (four older adults living with dementia), level of education (two older adults living with dementia), supporting person available (three older adults living with dementia and 1 older adult living without dementia), transportation service (one older adults living with dementia), MMSE (16 older adults living with dementia and six older adults living without dementia).
Results From ANOVA.
| Outcome: Total present out-of-home participation (univariate models) | Outcome: Total present out-of-home participation (final multivariate model) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | SS | Partial η2 | SS | Partial η2 | ||||
| Diagnosis group | 1 | 469.45 | 46.54** | .126 | 1 | 491 | 53.63** | .147 |
| Country of residence | 3 | 137.36 | 4.09* | .037 | 3 | 159.01 | 5.79** | .053 |
| Age group | 3 | 177.36 | 5.34* | .048 | 3 | 157.39 | 5.73** | .053 |
| Supporting person available | 1 | 53.58 | 4.67 | .014 | ||||
| Driving a car yourself | 1 | 221.69 | 20.42** | .059 | ||||
| Transportation service | 1 | 68.55 | 6.03 | .018 | ||||
| Interaction effect | ||||||||
| Diagnosis group x country of residence | 3 | 122.41 | 4.46* | .041 | ||||
| Error | 310 | 2838.08 | ||||||
| Total | 321 | 90,369 | ||||||
Notes. A two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was performed; df = degree of freedom; Partial η2 = partial eta squared; SS = sum of squares.
*p < .01. **p < .001.
Pairwise Comparisons of Total Out-of-Home Participation Between Diagnosis, Country of Residence, and Age Groups.
| Variable | Comparison | Mean difference | 99% CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis group | |||
| PwDG v. CG | −2.62** | −3.56, −1.70 | |
| Country of residence | |||
| Canada | Canada versus Sweden | −2.03** | −3.47, −.59 |
| Canada versus Switzerland | −1.17 | −2.63, .29 | |
| Canada versus UK | −.46 | −1.75, .83 | |
| Sweden | Sweden versus Switzerland | .86 | −.48, 2.2 |
| Sweden versus UK | 1.57* | .40, 2.75 | |
| Switzerland | Switzerland versus UK | .71 | −.47, 1.89 |
| UK | |||
| Age group | |||
| ≤64 | ≤64 versus 65–74 | −.47 | −1.97, 1.03 |
| ≤64 versus 75–84 | .43 | −1.07, 1.93 | |
| ≤64 versus ≥ 85 | 1.75 | −.04, 3.54 | |
| 65–74 | 65–74 versus 75–84 | .9 | −.14, 1.94 |
| 65–74 versus ≥ 85 | 2.22** | .81, 3.63 | |
| 75–84 | 75–84 versus ≥ 85 | 1.33 | −.04, 2.69 |
| ≥85 | |||
Note. CI = confidence intervals; PwDG = participants living with dementia group; CG = comparison group.
p < .01. **p < .001.
Mean Out-of-Home Present Participation in the ACT-OUT Questionnaire According to the Total Number of Places and for Each Domain A-D.
| Variable | Values | Sub-sample
of older adults living with dementia ( | Sub-sample of older adults
living without dementia ( | Cohen’s | 99% CI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total out-of-home participation
( | Mean (min-max) | 15.19 (2–22) | 17.6 (8–23) | 6.82 | 299.89 | <.001[ | .76 | .46, 1.05 |
| SD | 3.58 | 2.71 | ||||||
| Domain a
( | Mean (min-max) | 4.43 (0–6) | 5.24 (1–6) | 5.79 | 263.48 | <.001[ | .64 | .35, .94 |
| SD | 1.52 | .92 | ||||||
| Domain B
( | Mean (min-max) | 2.84 (0–5) | 2.97 (0–5) | 1.3 | 315.07 | NS[ | .15 | −.14, .43 |
| SD | .97 | .83 | ||||||
| Domain C
( | Mean (min-max) | 3.81 (0–6) | 4.57 (1–6) | 5.09 | 323 | <.001[ | .57 | .27, .86 |
| SD | 1.42 | 1.25 | ||||||
| Domain D
( | Mean (min-max) | 4.1 (0–7) | 4.82 (1–7) | 4.35 | 323 | <.001[ | .48 | .19, .77 |
| SD | 1.54 | 1.4 |
Notes. CI: confidence intervals; df: degrees of freedom; NS: non-statistically significant difference; SD: standard deviation.
Domain A: Consumer, administration, and self-care places.
Domain B: Places for medical care.
Domain C: Social, spiritual and cultural places.
Domain D: Places for recreation and physical activities.
aanalyzed with the independent t-test.
Percent Difference in Past and Present Out-of-Home Participation in the ACT-OUT Questionnaire According to Each Type of Place.
| Place type | Sub-sample of older adults living with dementia | Sub-sample of older adults living without dementia | Difference
in past/present participation between
sub-samples[ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Past/present participation | Past/present participation | ||||
| Domain A: Consumer,
administration, and self-care places ( | |||||
| Small grocery store | 86/72 | <.001 | 89/80 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Mall, supermarket | 98/83 | <.001 | 98/98 | NS | NS/<.001 |
| Small store | 92/75 | <.001 | 91/88 | NS | NS/.002 |
| Pharmacy | 98/77 | <.001 | 95/89 | NS | NS/.004 |
| Hairdresser | 90/79 | <.001 | 86/83 | NS | NS/NS |
| Bank, post office | 96/61 | <.001 | 97/88 | <.001 | NS/<.001 |
| Domain B: Places for medical care
( | |||||
| Doctor’s office | 85/80 | NS | 92/91 | NS | NS/.007 |
| Hospital, health center | 84/62 | <.001 | 78/71 | .004 | NS/NS |
| Dentist’s office | 95/78 | <.001 | 94/90 | NS | NS/.006 |
| Therapy | 62/35 | <.001 | 71/42 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Day care | 21/29 | NS | 6/4 | NS | <.001/<.001 |
| Domain C: Social, spiritual,
and cultural places ( | |||||
| Friend, family member’s place | 97/87 | <.001 | 96/91 | NS | NS/NS |
| Restaurant, café, bar | 94/88 | NS | 94/90 | NS | NS/NS |
| Senior center, social club | 72/41 | <.001 | 82/73 | <.001 | NS/<.001 |
| Building for worship | 72/52 | <.001 | 79/61 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Cemetery, memorial place | 71/54 | <.001 | 68/56 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Entertainment, cultural place | 93/62 | <.001 | 93/87 | NS | NS/<.001 |
| Domain D: Places for recreation and physical activities
( | |||||
| Garden | 86/75 | <.001 | 87/74 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Park, green area | 85/68 | <.001 | 86/71 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Forest, mountain, lake, sea | 93/59 | <.001 | 97/77 | <.001 | NS/<.001 |
| Cottage, summer house | 72/34 | <.001 | 68/44 | <.001 | NS/NS |
| Neighborhood | 96/89 | <.001 | 93/88 | .008 | NS/NS |
| Sports facility | 74/25 | <.001 | 75/48 | <.001 | NS/<.001 |
| Transportation center | 93/66 | <.001 | 96/79 | <.001 | NS/NS |
Notes. NS: non-statistically significant difference.
aDependent samples t-test.
bindependent samples t-test.