NIHR Policy Research Unit in Health and Social Care Workforce, The Policy Institute, King's College London, London, WC2R 2LS, UK.
Care Policy and Evaluation Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, WC2A 2AE, UK.
Health Soc Care Community. 2022 Nov;30(6):e4405-e4415. doi: 10.1111/hsc.13841. Epub 2022 May 17.
Self-neglect and hoarding are behaviours that are hard to define, measure and address. They are more prevalent among older people because of bio-psycho-social factors, which may be exacerbated by advancing age. This paper aims to further understandings of self-neglect and hoarding in England's Care Act 2014 context, drawing on a study involving qualitative interviews with local authority adult safeguarding managers who play an important role in determining interventions with individuals who self-neglect and/or hoard. Online interviews were conducted with adult safeguarding leads and managers from 31 English local authorities in 2021. Interview data were subject to thematic analysis. This paper explores the commonalities and differences in adult safeguarding managers' understandings of the causes and consequences of self-neglect and/or hoarding among older people, which are likely to have tangible impacts on service provision in their local authority, and influencing of wider changes to policies and procedures. Most participants understood these phenomena as caused by a range of bio-psycho-social factors, including chronic physical conditions, bereavement, isolation. A minority took a more clinical or psycho-medical perspective, focusing on mental ill-health, or referred to the social construction of norms of cleanliness and tidiness. Whatever their understanding, by the time such behaviours are brought to the attention of safeguarding professionals a crisis response may be all that is offered. The implications of the findings are that other agencies should be encouraged to provide more early help to older people at risk of self-neglect and/or of developing harmful hoarding behaviours, and that sustained engagement with those affected may help to understand some of the causes of these behaviours to enable effective support or practice interventions.
自我忽视和囤积是难以定义、衡量和解决的行为。由于生物心理社会因素,这些行为在老年人中更为普遍,这些因素可能因年龄增长而加剧。本文旨在通过对参与自我忽视和/或囤积的个人进行干预的重要作用的地方当局成人保护管理人员的定性访谈,进一步了解 2014 年《英格兰护理法案》中的自我忽视和囤积现象,本研究借鉴了一项研究。2021 年,对来自 31 个英国地方当局的成人保护负责人和管理人员进行了在线访谈。对访谈数据进行了主题分析。本文探讨了成人保护管理人员对老年人自我忽视和/或囤积的原因和后果的理解的共同点和差异,这些共同点和差异很可能对他们所在地方当局的服务提供产生切实影响,并影响政策和程序的更广泛变化。大多数参与者将这些现象理解为由一系列生物心理社会因素引起的,包括慢性身体状况、丧亲之痛、孤立。少数人采取了更临床或心理医学的观点,关注精神健康问题,或提到清洁和整洁规范的社会建构。无论他们的理解如何,这些行为引起关注时,可能只能提供危机应对。研究结果表明,应鼓励其他机构为有自我忽视和/或发展有害囤积行为风险的老年人提供更多早期帮助,与受影响者保持持续接触可能有助于了解这些行为的一些原因,从而提供有效的支持或实践干预。