| Literature DB >> 35898369 |
Eva Peisachovich1, Bill Kapralos2, Celina Da Silva1, Adam Dubrowski3, Naida L Graham4, Regina Jokel5,6.
Abstract
Dementia is considered a global health priority with projections of the disease set to increase dramatically across the world. Current support for persons living with dementia (PLWD) relies on long-term care and local service centers to provide education and support. Augmented reality-based programs continue to gain momentum across health sectors, becoming an innovative approach that provides an opportunity to have a visceral experience, which can deepen understanding and provide an embodied perspective of other groups within a relatively short time frame. There is increasing interest in developing approaches to aid patient care outcomes for PLWD and their caregivers. Hence, healthcare providers (HCPs) who are appropriately trained and equipped to provide quality care to PLWD are essential and of international concern. The purpose of this research program is to develop an augmented reality (AR) education experience (AREduX), a proof of concept prototype in the form of a digital resource that uses AR to simulate the physical and cognitive symptoms that PLWD experience. The findings from a stakeholder focus group will allow for the preliminary development of the AREduX.Entities:
Keywords: augmented reality; dementia; education; healthcare providers; simulation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35898369 PMCID: PMC9309013 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.26304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Focus group questions
| What role do you have: HCP, Caregiver of PLWD, PLWD, Instructional designer, Computer science expert, or Software developer? |
| For HCP/Caregiver: |
| In your opinion, tell me what makes a good HCP or caregiver? |
| What are your work-related goals when caring for PLWD? |
| What is the biggest challenge for you when caring for PLWD? What have you done about it or what are you going to do about it? |
| Tell me something positive about working with PLWD. |
| What’s the most interesting thing about your work with PLWD that we don’t know? |
| What personality trait of yours do you think is most valuable when caring for PLWD? |
| Tell me about a time you care for a PLWD. What part of the experience was most meaningful to you? |
| Tell me about a difficult client living with dementia, what made it difficult to work with them and what did you do to help them? |
| For PLWD: |
| What’s the best way your HCP or caregiver can take care of you? |
| What are some of the challenges you face every day? |
| What are the moods you typically experience during the day? |
| Do you have any concerns or worries in your day-to-day life? |
| Tell me something positive your HCP or caregiver did for you? Tell me something negative? How did it make you feel? |
| Have you come across a HCP or caregiver that was not patient with you? |
| Tell me about a difficult day you had with your HCP or caregiver? Did they resolve the issues? If not, how did you feel? What did you do? |
| For Other |
| What are ways we can integrate AR into long term care settings? |
| What is your experience with creating an AR experience to support learning? |
| What is your experience working with PLWD? |
| What is your experience with teaching learning contexts using AR? |
| Wrap-up questions: |
| What was the one thing you would like to be implemented into the development of the AREduX? |
| What are the most important things you've found out about AR during your learning or professional context? |
Themes and select participant quotations identified through qualitative data analysis
PLWD: persons living with dementia; PSW: personal support workers
| Theme | Sub-theme | Representative quotations | |
| 1 | Hurdles and challenges in caregiving | ||
| Relentless nature of caregiving | "Basically it's very, very hard, because you're there 24/7" | ||
| "It's all night long, you're getting up all night long" | |||
| "It's a constant, it never stops" | |||
| "That is just so exhausting for people" | |||
| Problems communicating | "I can't talk to him, I can’t understand what he's saying and I can't hear him, and nor can anybody else" | ||
| "If she needs something it is very difficult to explain, like it’s a guessing game" | |||
| "It’s very hard for her to express herself" | |||
| Others don't understand how hard it is | "I don't think anybody can appreciate until you go through what we're going through, how very difficult it can be" | ||
| "The more that people can understand what it really means to be 24 seven" | |||
| "It would be really helpful if somebody were to be aware of what's going on" | |||
| "If people really knew how much it hurt that they just abandon us alone" | |||
| 2 | Help from others (or lack of it) | ||
| Professional help | "They're very good at what they do and they're very fast" | ||
| "Sending in a PSW for 15 minutes, to bathe him. It doesn't begin to cut what I really need" | |||
| "If we have time, do them extra, and I do it for my clients to just give them a little bit relief" | |||
| Lack of help | "But when I’m there alone and it's the middle of the night, it's just me" | ||
| "The things that I’m doing I’m doing all by myself" | |||
| "You're the only one there" | |||
| Lack of family support | "Our kids don't understand what it is, they have no idea what it's like" | ||
| "They would never believe how much it hurts. I feel completely abandoned by the kids" | |||
| 3 | Description of PLWD | ||
| Capabilities – tasks and activities PLWD needs help with | "You have to do the bath" | ||
| "He's not understanding what he's not able to do" | |||
| "He can't follow my directions" | |||
| "To remind them to eat" | |||
| Capabilities – tasks and activities PLWD can do | "My husband would say thank-you a lot" | ||
| "She never forgot how to kiss" | |||
| "She was taking Wheel-Trans on her own. People were meeting her at the other end" | |||
| "She loves playing coffee on Lumosity" | |||
| Dementia signs and symptoms | "Forgetting what day it is" | ||
| "Loss of speech is part of the . . ." | |||
| "She tends to think of herself only" | |||
| "She starts breathing like she's running a marathon. And it's all part of the anxiety, and for no reason" | |||
| Non-dementia signs and symptoms | "He’d get very tired every day" | ||
| "She was so tired, staying in bed all the time" | |||
| "I don’t hear too well" | |||
| "He'd start the first few words. The first few words would be loud, but then the voice fell off" | |||
| "It is a challenge for her to walk on the lawn" | |||
| "It's the pain that is so hard to take" | |||
| 4 | Goals in caregiving | ||
| Safety | "Safety is really, really important" | ||
| "Keep their environment as safe as we can possibly make it for them" | |||
| "All of these things are safety things, it's so so important" | |||
| "You gotta keep them safe, I mean that's one of the most important things that we do is how do we keep them safe" | |||
| Keep PLWD happy, comfortable stimulated | "And stimulation, I’m trying to get her to try a day program or online activities" | ||
| "Make them feel comfortable" | |||
| Encourage independence | "Keeping them independent as much as we possibly can" | ||
| "While she can still do certain things I insist that she does it" | |||
| "Allow them to control as much as they can reasonably control. That's very important for them to have control" | |||
| "I’ve been trying to force her to keep doing as much as possible, but is that right or is that wrong I don't know" | |||
| Keep a routine | "Routine is very important for her" | ||
| "Keep a routine" | |||
| 5 | Strategies and things that help with caregiving | ||
| Patience | "It takes a lot of patience" | ||
| "I’m going to echo that too with patience" | |||
| "The patience was the first word that came to my mind as well" | |||
| Other essential carer characteristics | "Caring is the most important thing" | ||
| "Try to have empathy for the person you're caring for, trying to understand what they're going through" | |||
| "Putting yourself in someone's feet and thinking about them, what they are going through, and then, if you think that, and then you try to help them it is much different" | |||
| Adapt to the PLWD's needs | "Not going by the book all the time" | ||
| "It's not your agenda anymore, it's their agenda" | |||
| "Allow them to control as much as they can reasonably control" | |||
| Differentiate person and disease | "It's just understanding the disease process. It's not them, it's something else that is doing to them so that's why all this is happening" | ||
| Other strategies | "Unless it is not related to the safety so then just distract them" | ||
| "Make sure that every step is reinforced all the way, just reinforce as if it's a child or a dog" | |||
| "And I would simply put my arms around him and tell him that everything was okay, and that will help to quiet him down" | |||
| "Eventually, we put him on some pills and help to decrease the frustration and the anxiety" | |||
| Self-care | "You also have to take time for yourself" | ||
| "If you get burnt out you're no good to anybody" | |||
| 6 | Technology and equipment | ||
| Helpful | "When I lost my wife that was probably, one of the worst things I’ve ever felt my life, so when I got that monitor everything changed" | ||
| "The big thing for me was these life alarm items. SOS button and GPS tracker, I actually got it" | |||
| "Wearing the proper shoes, so that you don't fall, or you don't slip" | |||
| "I use the cane only and I’m very happy with the cane" | |||
| "My hearing aid" | |||
| "I watched my wife on Lumosity and . . . she adores it" | |||
| Unhelpful | "What do you do when I buy him an elevated toilet seat, but he won't sit down" | ||
| "I bought him a chairlift because we have one set of stairs, but you know he began to be afraid to sit in the chair" | |||
| "When I had a walker, I thought I would kill myself, I found that so dangerous" | |||
| "She doesn't use a cell phone at all" | |||
| "I tried Siri with my wife. It just doesn't work, really doesn't work for us" | |||
| Technology caregivers would like to be created | "Anything that I could do to make it easier for me to hear him" | ||
| "An interactive program where she can express certain things, and then the computer would be able to, she can draw back from the computer certain things that she forgot about" | |||
| "For argument's sake, pictures of people with their names and she would forget these names, but then she can go back to the computer and the computer can guide her" | |||
| "I can see a real use for that you know, just by having that hazard sort of light up" | |||
| 7 | AR design recommendations | ||
| Technology that could be developed | "If we're thinking just in an AR space, being able to label and actively amplify audio" | ||
| "On a small little device, you can touch a button and have it amplify a certain phrase" | |||
| "AR could provide purpose, fulfillment, and engagement to certain individuals" | |||
| "Providing a level of companionship to people who might be lonely a lot of the time" | |||
| "Being able to sense the emotions and neuro stimuli that occurs when certain activities are being undertaken and being able to capitalize on that and help give those individuals, a higher quality of life is really the challenge" | |||
| Design advice | "For anyone designing these tools, you know, making it simple but also being able to address those needs" | ||
| "The onboarding experience is really important because sometimes the people who use these devices may not be completely familiar with using technology" | |||
| "Having to get a lot of people to test and look at it, and even those that are not considered like the people that would be using it . . . just so that you can find out how it would be interacted with constantly is something that's really important" | |||
| "Because I don't play video games, so what most young people who have described this all to me, for example, assume I know how to use a controller to play a video game and I don't" | |||