Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Cambridge Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Cambridge Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Aug 8;9(8):e030087. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030087.
To apply and evaluate dementia-friendly community (DFC) principles in prisons.
A pilot study and process evaluation using mixed methods, with a 1-year follow-up evaluation period.
Two male prisons: a category C sex offender prison (prison A) and a local prison (prison B).
68 participants-50 prisoners, 18 staff.
The delivery of dementia information sessions, and the formulation and implementation of dementia-friendly prison action plans.
Study-specific questionnaires; Alzheimer's Society DFC criteria; semi-structured interview and focus group schedules.
Both prisons hosted dementia information sessions which resulted in statistically significant (p>0.05) increases in attendees' dementia knowledge, sustained across the follow-up period. Only prison A formulated and implemented a dementia action plan, although a prison B prisoner dedicated the prisoner magazine to dementia, post-information session. Prison A participants reported some progress on awareness raising, environmental change and support to prisoners with dementia in maintaining independence. The meeting of other dementia-friendly aims was less apparent. Numbers of older prisoners, and those diagnosed with dementia, appeared to have the greatest impact on engagement with DFC principles, as did the existence of specialist wings for older prisoners or those with additional care needs. Other barriers and facilitators included aspects of the prison institution and environment, staff teams, prisoners, prison culture and external factors.
DFC principles appear to be acceptable to prisons with some promising progress and results found. However, a lack of government funding and strategy to focus action around the escalating numbers of older prisoners and those living with dementia appears to contribute to a context where interventions targeted at this highly vulnerable group can be deprioritised. A more robust evaluation of this intervention on a larger scale over a longer period of time would be useful to assess its utility further.
将痴呆症友好社区(DFC)原则应用于监狱并评估其效果。
采用混合方法的试点研究和过程评估,为期 1 年的随访评估期。
两所男子监狱:一所 C 类性犯罪者监狱(监狱 A)和一所地方监狱(监狱 B)。
68 名参与者-50 名囚犯,18 名工作人员。
提供痴呆症信息会议,并制定和实施痴呆症友好监狱行动计划。
特定于研究的问卷;阿尔茨海默病协会 DFC 标准;半结构化访谈和焦点小组时间表。
两所监狱都举办了痴呆症信息会议,与会者的痴呆症知识显著增加(p>0.05),并在随访期间持续增加。只有监狱 A 制定并实施了痴呆症行动计划,尽管监狱 B 的一名囚犯在信息会议后将囚犯杂志专门用于痴呆症。监狱 A 的参与者报告在提高认识、环境改变和支持痴呆症囚犯保持独立方面取得了一些进展。其他痴呆症友好目标的实现则不太明显。老年囚犯和被诊断患有痴呆症的囚犯的数量似乎对 DFC 原则的参与产生了最大的影响,此外,为老年囚犯或有额外护理需求的囚犯设立专门的病房或区域也产生了影响。其他障碍和促进因素包括监狱机构和环境、工作人员团队、囚犯、监狱文化和外部因素等方面。
DFC 原则似乎为监狱所接受,取得了一些有希望的进展和结果。然而,政府缺乏资金和策略,无法将行动重点放在不断增加的老年囚犯和痴呆症患者身上,这使得针对这一高度脆弱群体的干预措施可能被优先考虑。在更大规模和更长时间内对该干预措施进行更有力的评估将有助于进一步评估其效用。