Danish Dementia Research Centre, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Migrant Health Clinic, Odense University Hospital, Denmark; Centre for Global Health, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark; Health Sciences Research Center, University College Lillebælt, Denmark.
Dementia (London). 2021 Apr;20(3):884-898. doi: 10.1177/1471301220914751. Epub 2020 Mar 24.
Although minority ethnic families have a lower uptake of dementia care services, little research has explored how minority ethnic carers cope with and manage dementia care in their everyday lives. The aim of this study was to investigate organization of family dementia care in Turkish, Pakistani, and Arabic speaking minority ethnic families from the perspective of family carers, primary care dementia coordinators, and multicultural link workers in Denmark.
Semi-structured qualitative individual and group interviews with minority ethnic family carers, primary care dementia coordinators, and multicultural link workers. Hermeneutic phenomenology was used as theoretical framework and results were analyzed using thematic analysis.
A total of 21 individual and four group interviews were conducted, including a total of 30 participants. A key finding was that the care responsibility was usually shared between several family members, who took turns to provide 24-hour care for the person with dementia. Rotational 24-hour care, either by having the person with dementia live with different family members or by having different family members take turns to move in with the person with dementia, emerged as a common alternative to formal care. Another important finding was that despite decreasing the burden of care of individual family carers, rotational care could be confusing and stressful to the person with dementia and could have a negative impact on the quality of life of all involved.
The way minority ethnic families organize dementia care have implications for understanding and communicating about support needs. Higher reliance on shared family care should not be taken to indicate that minority ethnic communities are not in need of support from formal services.
尽管少数民族家庭对痴呆症护理服务的接受程度较低,但很少有研究探讨少数民族照顾者如何在日常生活中应对和管理痴呆症护理。本研究旨在从丹麦的少数民族家庭照顾者、初级保健痴呆症协调员和多元文化联络工作者的角度,调查土耳其语、巴基斯坦语和阿拉伯语少数民族家庭的家庭痴呆症护理组织情况。
对少数民族家庭照顾者、初级保健痴呆症协调员和多元文化联络工作者进行半结构式定性个体和小组访谈。采用解释现象学作为理论框架,使用主题分析进行结果分析。
共进行了 21 次个人访谈和 4 次小组访谈,共 30 名参与者。一个关键发现是,护理责任通常由几名家庭成员分担,他们轮流为痴呆症患者提供 24 小时护理。24 小时轮流护理,要么让痴呆症患者与不同的家庭成员住在一起,要么让不同的家庭成员轮流搬来与痴呆症患者住在一起,这是一种常见的替代正式护理的方式。另一个重要发现是,尽管轮流照顾可以减轻个别家庭照顾者的照顾负担,但对痴呆症患者来说可能会感到困惑和压力,并可能对所有相关人员的生活质量产生负面影响。
少数民族家庭组织痴呆症护理的方式对理解和沟通支持需求有影响。对共享家庭护理的更高依赖不应被视为少数民族社区不需要正式服务支持的迹象。