Bibliotek
Sökresultat
Din sökning på resulterade i 8019 träffar
Anhörigengagemang : Två studier på Gotland
Anhöriggruppen ger avlastning (på äldre dar).
Anhörigkonsulenten har en nyckelroll.
Anhörigkonsulentens arbete och yrkesroll
Anhörigkonsulenter och motsvarande yrkesgrupper har en central betydelse för innehållet i och utvecklingen av anhörigstödet i landets kommuner. Nka har därför genomfört en enkätstudie med syftet att få en nationell överblick över hur denna relativt sett nya yrkesgrupp utformar och ser på sitt arbete. Denna rapport innehåller en sammanställning av svaren på denna enkät som riktade sig till landets samtliga anhörigkonsulenter.
Anhörigomsorg : Av kärlek eller tvång?
Anhörigomsorg : Av kärlek eller tvång?
Anhörigskapets variationer : Åtta berättelser från hjälpgivare i olika miljöer
Anhörigstöd - ett helt annat sätt att tänka. Fokus-Rapport 2011:1
Författarna har tillsammans 100 års erfarenhet av verksamhet inom området äldre och funktionshindrade och deras familjer.
Rapporten belyser på ett insiktsfullt sätt den komplexitet i anhörigomsorg som ligger i sakens natur och diskuterar dess subtila nyanser.
Denna text är en oväderlig resurs för studenter inom vårdvetenskap, socialt arbete och rehabilitering, för personal som arbetar direkt med anhöriga i sitt dagliga arbete, för beslutsfattare med ansvar för anhörigstöd i kommunerna och för alla andra med intresse för ämnet.
Anhörigstöd - information via internet? [Kandidatuppsats]
Anhörigstöd - information via internet? [Kandidatuppsats]
Disability pension in young adulthood among former child welfare clients. A national cohort study.
Using longitudinal register data on all persons born in Sweden 1973–1978, we report on prevalence of disability pension among young adults who were child welfare clients during their formative years, and explore risk factors for this long-term outcome. For most child welfare subgroups, prevalence approached or exceeded ten percent. Multivariate logistic regression analyses found high crude odds ratios of disability pension among child welfare alumni. These were substantially reduced – but not obliterated – after adjustments for a host of background factors. Decomposition analyses revealed that child welfare alumni's poor school performance and low educational attainment accounted for most of the confounding effects. We also found that child welfare clients with a disability pension had far higher rates of psychosocial problems in their adult lives than other peers with a disability pension.
Child welfare alumni should be regarded as a high risk group for future disability pension and for permanent exclusion from the labor market. Rates of suicidal behavior in adult age were extreme among some subgroups of child welfare alumni with a disability pension, which should be communicated to agencies who are likely to meet these groups (eg. primary health care).
Disability Politics. Understanding our past, changing our future
This powerful book presents a series of perspectives on the process of self-organisation of disabled people which has taken place over the last thirty years. The 1980s saw a transformation in our understanding of the nature of disability, and consequently the kinds of policies and services necessary to ensure the full economic and social integration of disabled people. At the heart of this transformation has been the rise in the number of organisations controlled and run by disabled people themselves. Through a series of interviews with disabled people who have been centrally involved in the rise of the disability movement, the authors present a new collective history which throws light on the politics of the 1980s, and offers insights into future political developments in the 1990s and on into the twenty-first century.
Disability Rights and the denial of Young Carers. The dangers of zero-sum arguments
Research, debate and policy on young carers has been welcomed by the carers movement and children's rights practitioners alike, but challenged by some disability rights authors who suggest defining the children of disabled parents as 'young carers' serves to undermine both the rights of disabled people and the rights of children. Among those putting forward this view are Jenny Morris and Lois Keith (Critical Social Policy, 1995, Issue 44/45). Here, we respond to the disability rights critique on behalf of academics working in the field of young carers, policy-makers and practitioners and, more importantly, on behalf of children who care.
Disability Rights and the denial of Young Carers. The dangers of zero-sum arguments
Research, debate and policy on young carers has been welcomed by the carers movement and children's rights practitioners alike, but challenged by some disability rights authors who suggest defining the children of disabled parents as 'young carers' serves to undermine both the rights of disabled people and the rights of children. Among those putting forward this view are Jenny Morris and Lois Keith (Critical Social Policy, 1995, Issue 44/45). Here, we respond to the disability rights critique on behalf of academics working in the field of young carers, policy-makers and practitioners and, more importantly, on behalf of children who care.
Experiences in a group of grown-up children of mentally ill parents
Children of mentally ill parents have increased rates of psychopathology and reduced adaptive functioning. However, there are very few studies examining the subjective experiences of those children and their opinions concerning their previous contact with psychiatric services. This study followed up a group of children of former psychiatric inpatients by sending them a questionnaire asking about their experiences. Thirty-six individuals responded. Answers were analysed qualitatively by using manifest content analysis. Participants reported negative experiences and lack of information and support from psychiatric care. They had wanted more explanations and more support for themselves. Quantitative data are used to establish the significance of the results.
Experiences of long-term home care as an informal caregiver to a spouse: gendered meanings in everyday life for female carers
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: In this article, we explore the gender aspects of long-term caregiving from the perspective of women providing home care for a spouse suffering from dementia.
BACKGROUND: One of the most common circumstances in which a woman gradually steps into a long-term caregiver role at home involves caring for a spouse suffering from dementia. Little attention has been paid to examining the experiences and motivations of such caregivers from a feminist perspective.
METHODS: Twelve women, all of whom were informal caregivers to a partner suffering from dementia, were interviewed on the following themes: the home, their partner's disease, everyday life, their relationship and autonomy. The results of these interviews were analysed in relation to gender identity and social power structures using a feminist perspective.
RESULTS: The findings of this study show that the informants frequently reflected on their caregiving activities in terms of both general and heteronormative expectations. The results suggest that the process of heteropolarisation in these cases can be an understood as a consequence of both the spouse's illness and the resulting caring duties. Also, the results suggest that the act of caring leads to introspections concerning perceived 'shortcomings' as a caregiver. Finally, the results indicate that it is important to recognise when the need for support in day-to-day caring is downplayed.
CONCLUSIONS: Women view their caregiving role and responsibilities as paramount; their other duties, including caring for themselves, are deemed less important. We stress that the intense commitment and responsibilities that women experience in their day-to-day caring must be acknowledged and that it is important for healthcare professionals to find mechanisms for providing choices for female caregivers without neglecting their moral concerns.
IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Female carers face difficulties in always living up to gendered standards and this need to be considered when evaluating policies and practices for family carers
Experiences of loss and chronic sorrow in persons with severe chronic illness
Aims and objectives. The aims of the present study were to describe losses narrated by persons afflicted with severe chronic physical illness and to identify the concomitant occurrence of chronic sorrow.
Background. Reactions connected with repeated losses are referred to in the literature as chronic sorrow, which has recently been described in conjunction with chronic illness.
Design. A qualitative study with an abductive approach of analysis, including both inductive and deductive interpretations.
Method. The study is based on 30 persons of working age with average disease duration of 18 years. The average age was 51 years. All of the persons had personal assistance for at least three months because of considerable need for help in daily life due to physical disability. Each person was interviewed twice. There was also an independent assessment of the deductive results concerning chronic sorrow.
Discharged from hospital and in need of home care nursing : experience of older persons, their relatives and care professionals
Background and aim: The discharge process (DP) is full of well-known risks. The general aim of this thesis was to shed more light into how different stakeholders experience the DP and evaluate the older persons' and their relative's preparedness for life at home after hospital discharge. Materials and methods: Both qualitative (Studies I, II, IV) and quantitative (Study III) research methods were selected. In Study I different care professionals (n=32) were interviewed in eight focus groups. Study I used a phenomenological method. In Study II older persons with home care nursing (HCN) and their relatives (n=26) were interviewed, and a grounded theory method was used. In Study III data were collected through a questionnaire among older persons and their relatives (n=152) and the questionnaire's psychometric properties were evaluated. Study IV was based on the data in Studies I and II and used an excursive interpretation based on a phenomenological approach and reflective lifeworld research. Results: The older persons and their relatives, as well as the care professionals, viewed the DP as ambiguous. Care and planning were described as fragmented. Three themes were important for care professionals' cooperation, actions and the outcome of the DP, but also associated with various difficulties and problems. The main concern of the older persons and their relatives was worry about not being sufficiently prepared for life at home. A theoretical model was created that illustrates whether the older persons and their relatives felt prepared or unprepared for life at home at discharge. The care professionals' skills were shown to be of utmost importance to satisfy the preparatory needs of the older persons and their relatives in three significant areas. The questionnaire showed that fifty-three per cent of the older persons and their relatives reported being insufficiently prepared. Factors associated with being insufficiently prepared were poor health at the time of the discharge and not asking for information. The DP is shown to be a critical event with illness making the meaning of life's fragility abruptly explicit and an unpredictable threat to getting on with one's life. The DP is characterised by experiences of being in-between that is contextual, bodily and existential for the older persons and the relatives accentuating their vulnerability. The relationship with care professionals and others, bodily conditions and life circumstances influence the in-between experience. Without the professional support and cooperation among them in the DP, the older persons run the risk of being lost and powerless throughout the DP. Conclusions: The DP deeply affects older persons and their relatives. When care professionals use a disease-led approach in their encounter with older patients and follow solely medical routines, they may lose focus on the patients' health processes. The older persons' and their relatives' experiences of exposedness and vulnerability due to illness, bodily, existential or contextual uncertainty indicate a threatening existence in the DP. The older persons and their relatives can easily be lost in an in- between experience illuminating the difficulties embedded in the illness, care and the DP in an older person's life. Care professionals need to acknowledge the individual and their everyday world and give follow-up support at home. This would make the DP a strong bridge between the hospital and home. The PPLH questionnaire developed from the theoretical model can be used to provide information that may prove useful in improving the DP from the perspective of older persons and their relatives and also as an assessment tool to identify and satisfy needs among older persons and their relatives both at hospital and at home.
Disclosure of incurable illness to spouses: do they want to know? A Swedish population-based follow-up study
Explorascope: Stimulation of language and communicative skills of multiple handicapped children through an interactive, adaptive educational toy
Very young non- or hardly-speaking children with severe disabilities need active guidance to stimulate interaction with their environment in order to develop their communicative and linguistic skills. Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems can help this process, provided that they are tuned to this specific user group. LinguaBytes is a research programme, which aims at developing an interactive and adaptive educational toy that stimulates the language and communicative skills of multiple-handicapped children with a developmental age of 1-4 years. In this article we show which guidelines we consider essential for developing this tool. We have developed several concepts based on these guidelines, of which we elucidate Explorascope (E-scope). E-scope consists of a tangible toy-like interface that is adaptable to an individual child with respect to his or her cognitive, linguistic, emotional and perceptual-motor skills. A first user test shows that E-scope is promising and useful for this user group.
Exploring access to care among older people in the last phase of life using the behavioural model of health services use: a qualitative study from the perspective of the next of kin of older persons who had died in a nursing home.
BACKGROUND: There is little investigation into what care older people access
during the last phase of their life and what factors enable access to care in
this group. Illuminating this from the perspective of the next of kin may provide
valuable insights into how the health and social care system operates with
reference to providing care for this vulnerable group. The behavioural model of
health services use has a wide field of application but has not been tested
conceptually regarding access to care from the perspective of the next of kin.
The aim of this study was to explore the care accessed by older people during the
last phase of their life from the perspective of the next of kin and to
conceptually test the behavioural model of health services use.
METHODS: The data collection took place in 2011 by means of qualitative
interviews with 14 next of kin of older people who had died in a nursing home.
The interviews were analysed using directed content analysis. The behavioural
model of health services use was used in deriving the initial coding scheme,
including the categories: utilization of health services, consumer satisfaction
and characteristics of the population at risk.
RESULTS: Utilization of health services in the last phase of life was described
in five subcategories named after the type of care accessed i.e. admission to a
nursing home, primary healthcare, hospital care, dental care and informal care.
The needs were illuminated in the subcategories: general deterioration, medical
conditions and acute illness and deterioration when death approaches. Factors
that enabled access to care were described in three subcategories: the
organisation of care, next of kin and the older person. These factors could also
constitute barriers to accessing care. Next of kin's satisfaction with care was
illuminated in the subcategories: satisfaction, dissatisfaction and factors
influencing satisfaction. One new category was constructed inductively: the
situation of the next of kin.
CONCLUSIONS: A bed in a nursing home was often accessed during what the next of
kin regarded as the last phase of life. The needs among older people in the last
phase of life can be regarded as complex and worsening over time. Most enabling
factors lied within the organisation of care but the next of kin enabled access
to care and contributed significantly to care quality. More research is needed
regarding ageism and stigmatic attitudes among professionals and informal
caregivers acting as a barrier to accessing care for older people in the last
phase of their life. The behavioural model of health services use was extended
with a new category showing that the situation of the next of kin must be taken
into consideration when investigating access to care from their perspective. It
may also be appropriate to include informal care as part of the concept of access
when investigating access to care among older people in the last phase of their
life. The results may not be transferable to older people who have not gained
access to a bed in a nursing home or to countries where the healthcare system
Exploring assistance in Sweden and the United States.
Discrepancy between Mother and Child Perceptions of Their Relationship: I. Consequences for Adolescents Considered within the Context of Parental Divorce
Previous research has shown that parent-adolescent conflict is associated with adolescent adjustment. One possible source of conflict between parents and adolescents is the discrepant ways in which they perceive their relationship, which may contribute to adolescent adjustment difficulties. The present study examined the association between mother-adolescent discrepant views in their relationship and adolescent adjustment difficulties concurrently and longitudinally. In addition, the role of a family stressor, in this case parental divorce, in enhancing the discrepant views and moderating the relationship between discrepancy in perceptions and adolescent adjustment was examined. Results indicated that discrepancies in mother perception and adolescent perception of their relationship were associated with mother report of internalizing and externalizing behavior problems concurrently and longitudinally. Furthermore, discrepancies were significantly higher in divorced families than intact families, but divorce did not moderate the relationship between discrepancies and adolescent adjustment. Clinical implications and directions for future research are discussed.
Disenfranchised grief: Recognizing hidden sorrow
A rich and full exploration of the myriad of instances where a mourner is deprived of the catharsis shared grief brings. Provides numerous interventions designed to help patients recognize and explore their loss, and find meaningful and appropriate ways to resolve their grief.
Diskriminerad, trakasserad och kränkt
I denna rapport redovisas den första delen av regeringsuppdraget om diskriminering. Den omfattar en undersökning om barns, elevers och studerandes uppfattningar om och upplevelser av situationer där diskriminering och trakasserier förekommer i förskolan, grundskolan, obligatoriska särskolan, gymnasiesärskolan, särvux och gymnasieskolan samt i den kommunala vuxenutbildningen/SFI. De övriga delarna i detta regeringsuppdrag finns redovisade dels i Skolverkets rapport "Tillgänglighet till skolors lokaler och valfrihet för elever med funktionsnedsättning", dels i Skolverkets rapport "Barn- och elevskyddslagen i praktiken. Förskolors, skolors och vuxenutbildningens tillämpning av lagen"
Disorganized attachment in early childhood: Meta-analysis of precursors, concomitants, and sequelae.
During the past 10 years nearly 80 studies on disorganized attachment involving more than 6,000 infant-parent dyads have been carried out. The current series of meta-analyses have established the reliability and discriminant validity of disorganized infant attachment. Although disorganized attachment behavior is necessarily difficult to observe and often subtle, many researchers have managed to become reliable coders. Furthermore, disorganized attachment shows modest short- and long-term stability, in particular in middle class environments, and it is not just a concomitant of constitutional, temperamental, or physical child problems. The predictive validity of disorganized attachment is established in terms of problematic stress management, the elevated risk of externalizing problem behavior, and even the tendency of disorganized infants to show dissociative behavior later in life. In normal, middle class families, about 15% of the infants develop disorganized attachment behavior. In other social contexts and in clinical groups this percentage may become twice or even three times higher (e.g., in the case of maltreatment). Although the importance of disorganized attachment for developmental psychopathology is evident, the search for the mechanisms leading to disorganization has just started. Frightening parental behavior may play an important role but it does not seem to be the only causal factor involved in the emergence of disorganized attachment.
Disorganized infant attachment and preventive interventions: A review and meta-analysis
Infant disorganized attachment is a major risk factor for problematic stress management and later problem behavior. Can the emergence of attachment disorganization be prevented? The current narrative review and quantitative meta-analysis involves 15 preventive interventions (N = 842) that included infant disorganized attachment as an outcome measure. The effectiveness of the interventions ranged from negative to positive, with an overall effect size of d = 0.05 (ns). Effective interventions started after 6 months of the infant's age (d = 0.23). Interventions that focused on sensitivity only were significantly more effective in reducing attachment disorganization (d = 0.24) than interventions that (also) focused on support and parent's mental representations (d = −0.04). Most sample characteristics were not associated with differences in effect sizes, but studies with children at risk were more successful (d = 0.29) than studies with at-risk parents (d = −0.10), and studies on samples with higher percentages of disorganized attachment in the control groups were more effective (d = 0.31) than studies with lower percentages of disorganized children in the control group (d = −0.18). The meta-analysis shows that disorganized attachments may change as a side effect of sensitivity-focused interventions, but it also illustrates the need for interventions specifically focusing on the prevention of disorganization.
Disorganized infant attachment and preventive interventions: a review and meta-analysis (Structured abstract).
This review concluded that disorganised infant attachment could be affected by sensitivity-focused interventions, but interventions specifically designed to prevent disorganised attachment were needed. These conclusions reflect the evidence presented, but they may not be reliable in view of the limitations in the review process and the unknown quality of the included studies.
Disorganized infant attachment and preventive interventions: a review and meta-analysis (Structured abstract).
This review concluded that disorganised infant attachment could be affected by sensitivity-focused interventions, but interventions specifically designed to prevent disorganised attachment were needed. These conclusions reflect the evidence presented, but they may not be reliable in view of the limitations in the review process and the unknown quality of the included studies.
Do community-based support services benefit bereaved children? a review of empirical evidence
Abstract
AIMS:
To consider the evidence of effect from English language, empirically based quantitative evaluations of community-based interventions for bereaved children; community-based interventions being understood as those taking place outside a clinical setting.
METHODS:
MedLine, PsychInfo, Applied Social Sciences Index and Sociological Abstracts were searched for documents containing the words 'child', 'bereavement' and 'program', 'group', 'intervention', 'support' or 'evaluation'. The criterion for inclusion was that studies use a control group or pre- and post-test measurements using a standardized instrument.
RESULTS:
Nine relevant studies were identified. However, empirical evidence of positive outcomes for children was limited and compromised by methodological weaknesses in the design of the studies. Small sample sizes, irregular attendance, high levels of attrition, short time scales between pre- and post-testing and difficulty in developing appropriate instrumentation, including assessment of adherence to the agreed intervention programme, all created problems.
CONCLUSIONS:
The case for universal inclusion of this group of children in such support programmes remains unproven, and further exploration of the outcomes of a range of different community interventions is required, with a specific focus on long-term and/or unwanted effects and evaluation of the basis for referral.
Does anybody care? : Public and private responsibilities in Swedish eldercare 1940-2000 (Umeå studies in economic history ; 31).
Does anybody care? : Public and private responsibilities in Swedish eldercare 1940-2000 (Umeå studies in economic history; 31)
Does day care also provide care for the caregiver?
Does day care also provide care for the caregiver?
Does Early Bereavement Counseling Prevent Ill Health and Untimely Death?
Fifty elderly bereaved men and women, who received bereavement counseling by a physician and a psychologist at 3 separate occasions during the year after loss, were followed during another 10 years in regard to morbidity and mortality, as some earlier studies have indicated increased risk during widowhood. Days of hospital care and mortality rates during 5 and 8 years, respectively, were the primary outcome variables. A group of representative married subjects was used for comparison purposes. The results showed no difference between the groups in the number of days of care before loss, nor did the days of hospital care after the loss differ. The mortality rate was similar in both groups. This may suggest that bereavement counseling has a preventive effect regarding health and survival, but this should be further evaluated in controlled studies before counseling programs can be recommended.
Does early caregiving matter? The effects on young caregivers’ adult mental health
Limited information is available on the long-term effects of providing care for adults when caregiving begins in childhood in the United States. The current study provided an examination of the effects of youthful caregiving on the mental health of these persons when adults, and provided a description of their early family relations. Twenty-four individuals, 21 to 58 years old, were given brief phone interviews with semistructured questions about their early caregiving experiences, and then they completed questionnaires on their early caregiving experiences, mental health, and early parent–child relations. To be included, respondents must have provided primary caregiving assistance (i.e., bathing, feeding, etc.) for a parent or adult relative when the caregiver was under 21 years old. Results showed that the sample reported more positive mental health than negative mental health, though 42% had high depressive scores on the total CES-D. Individuals who reported fathers as too protective reported less current positive mental health. Early caregiving is not associated with poor mental health in adulthood for many young caregivers. However, some individuals do appear at risk of depression in adulthood.
Does gender matter? : Differences in patterns of informal support and formal services in a Swedish urban elderly population
Does gender matter? : Differences in patterns of informal support and formal services in a swedish urban elderly population
Does gender matter? Differences in patterns of informal support and formal services in a swedish urban elderly population
Does gender matter? Differences in patterns of informal support and formal services in a Swedish urban elderly population
Does individual treatment for alcoholic fathers benefit their children? A longitudinal assessment
Psychosocial adjustment in children of alcoholics (COAs; N=125) was examined before and at 3 follow-ups in the 15 months after their fathers entered alcoholism treatment. Before their fathers' treatment, COAs exhibited greater overall and clinical-level symptomatology than children from the demographically matched comparison sample, but they improved significantly following their fathers' treatment. Children of stably remitted fathers were similar to their demographic counterparts from the comparison sample and had fewer adjustment problems than children of relapsed fathers, even after accounting for children's baseline adjustment. Thus, COAs' adjustment improved when their fathers received treatment for alcoholism, and fathers' recovery from alcoholism was associated with clinically significant reductions in child problems.
Does Informal Eldercare Impede Women's Employment? The Case of European Welfare States
European states vary in eldercare policies and in gendered norms of family care, and this study uses these variations to gain insight into the importance of macro-level factors for the work-care relationship. Using advanced panel data methods on European Community Household Panel (ECHP) data for 1994-2001, this study finds women's employment to be negatively associated with informal caregiving to the elderly across the European Union. For the countries included in the study, the effects of informal caregiving seem to be more negative in Southern Europe, less negative in Nordic countries, and in between these extremes in Central Europe. This study explains that since eldercare is a choice in countries with more formal care and less pronounced gendered care norms, the weaker impact of eldercare on women's employment in these countries has to do with the lesser degree of coercion in the caring decision. Adapted from the source document.
Does intensive multimodal treatment for maternal ADHD improve the efficacy of parent training for children with ADHD? A randomized controlled multicenter trial
BACKGROUND:
This is the first randomized controlled multicenter trial to evaluate the effect of two treatments of maternal attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) on response to parent-child training targeting children's external psychopathology.
METHODS:
Mother-child dyads (n = 144; ADHD according to DSM-IV; children: 73.5% males, mean age 9.4 years) from five specialized university outpatient units in Germany were centrally randomized to multimodal maternal ADHD treatment [group psychotherapy plus open methylphenidate medication; treatment group (TG): n = 77] or to clinical management [supportive counseling without psychotherapy or psychopharmacotherapy; control group (CG): n = 67]. After 12 weeks, the maternal ADHD treatment was supplemented by individual parent-child training for all dyads. The primary outcome was a change in the children's externalizing symptom scores (investigator blinded to the treatment assignment) from baseline to the end of the parent-child training 6 months later. Maintenance therapy continued for another 6 months. An intention-to-treat analysis was performed within a linear regression model, controlling for baseline and center after multiple imputations of missing values.
RESULTS:
Exactly, 206 dyads were assessed for eligibility, 144 were randomized, and 143 were analyzed (TG: n = 77; CG: n = 66). After 6 months, no significant between-group differences were found in change scores for children's externalizing symptoms (adjusted mean TG-mean CG=1.1, 95% confidence interval -0.5-2.7; p = .1854), although maternal psychopathology improved more in the TG. Children's externalizing symptom scores improved from a mean of 14.8 at baseline to 11.4 (TG) and 10.3 (CG) after 6 months and to 10.8 (TG) and 10.1 (CG) after 1 year. No severe harms related to study treatments were found, but adverse events were more frequent in TG mothers than in CG mothers.
CONCLUSIONS:
The response in children's externalizing psychopathology did not differ between maternal treatment groups. However, multimodal treatment was associated with more improvement in maternal ADHD. Child and maternal treatment gains were stable (CCT-ISRCTN73911400).
Does it matter who cares? A comparison of daughters versus daughters-in-law in Japanese elder care
Does long-term care coverage shape the impact of informal care-giving on quality of life? A difference-in-difference approach
Abstract
The impact that providing care to ageing parents has on adult children's lives may depend on the long-term care (LTC) context. A common approach to test this is to compare whether the impact of care-giving varies between countries with different LTC coverage. However, this approach leaves considerable room for omitted variable bias. We use individual fixed-effects analyses to reduce bias in the estimates of the effects of informal care-giving on quality of life, and combine this with a difference-in-difference approach to reduce bias in the estimated moderating impact of LTC coverage on these effects. We draw on longitudinal data for Sweden and Denmark from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) collected between 2004 and 2015. Both countries traditionally had generous LTC coverage, but cutbacks were implemented at the end of the 20th century in Sweden and more recently in Denmark. We use this country difference in the timing of the cutbacks to shed light on effects of LTC coverage on the impact care-giving has on quality of life. Our analyses show that care-giving was more detrimental for quality of life in Sweden than in Denmark, and this difference weakened significantly when LTC coverage was reduced in Denmark, but not in Sweden. This suggests that LTC coverage shapes the impact of care-giving on quality of life
Does Maternal ADHD Reduce the Effectiveness of Parent Training for Preschool Children’s ADHD?
OBJECTIVE:
To assess the impact of maternal attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms on the effectiveness of a parent training (PT) program for preschool ADHD.
METHOD:
Eighty-three 3-year-old children with ADHD and their mothers selected from two community cohorts living in Hampshire, England (1992-93 and 1995-96, respectively), completed an 8-week PT program. ADHD symptoms and a number of other parent and child factors, including adult ADHD symptoms, were measured prior to the start of treatment (week 1: T1), immediately after treatment (week 8: T2), and at 15 weeks follow-up (week 23: T3).
RESULTS:
Mothers were divided into three groups on the basis of their scores (T1) on the Adult AD/HD Rating Scale (high, medium, low). Children of mothers in the high-ADHD group displayed no improvement after PT, whereas the levels of ADHD symptoms of the children of mothers in either the medium or low ADHD groups reduced substantially (F(4,60) = 3.13, p < .05). This association persisted after other child and maternal factors were controlled for in multiple regression analyses (beta > .30, p < .05).
CONCLUSIONS:
High levels of maternal ADHD symptoms limit the improvement shown by children with ADHD after a program of PT. This effect was unrelated to other aspects of maternal mental health and child functioning. The treatment of parental ADHD may be a prerequisite for the success of psychosocial interventions for childhood ADHD.
Does parent management training for children with externalizing problem behavior in routine care result in clinically significant changes?
The clinical significance of a parent management training that is part of the Prevention Program for Externalizing Problem Behavior (PEP) was assessed in an effectiveness trial. Parent management training was offered under routine care conditions in a setting where a high proportion of children were expected to show clinically relevant symptoms of externalizing problem behavior. At the beginning of the study, 32.6% to 60.7% of children were classified as clinical cases (dysfunctional) on three outcome measures of child behavior problems. Three months after treatment, 24.8% to 60.4% of children were judged to be recovered. Parent management training can result in clinically significant changes in children with externalizing behavior problems.
Doing gender and age: The case of informal elderly care in the Czech Republic
This article seeks to describe and explain some of the factors behind the prevalence of women in informal care for seniors. It presents a qualitative study of women who are caring for a frail elderly parent in the Czech Republic. Care is seen as a space where gender and other intersecting identities are performed and this has specific subjective, structural and material consequences. The author draws on biographical interviews with women caregivers and shows how they "do gender and age" in their narratives of how and why they made the decision to provide care and how they actually provide care. The author identifies situations and circumstances in which gender categories and gender relations shift and are destabilised by changes in society. The Czech Republic is a country with a history of state socialism and with traditionally large numbers of women in the workforce, but it also has a highly traditional gender culture.
Doing the Dirty Work. The global politics of domestic labour
Doing things together”: Towards a health promoting approach to couples’ relationships and everyday life in dementia.
Background: Most people with dementia live in their own homes, often together with their partners, who become informal caregivers. Relationship quality and sense of couplehood can be threatened as a result of the transition from a mutually interdependent relationship to a caregiver-care-receiver relationship. This, in turn, may lead to many negative consequences for both partners. Support provided for couples is often divided into different types for the person with dementia and for the partner without dementia and lacks couple-based support that targets the relationship, resources and the couple's everyday life together. Aim: The overall aim of this thesis is to explore couple-centred interventions in dementia and to develop and test a salutogenic, resource-oriented and couple-based intervention among couples in which one partner has dementia living at home. Methods and findings: This thesis comprises three parts: The first part Exploring involves two linked reviews, one narrative review (study I A) and one scoping review (study I B) that aim to identify and describe what previous couple-centred interventions comprised and why they were conducted. The results of the reviews revealed a knowledge gap in and a need for easily accessible support that targets couple relationships, resources and everyday life. The second part Developing (study II) refers to the development of an easily accessible resource-oriented couple-management intervention. The first step was to identify priority topics for such an intervention through a co-researcher process with couples living with dementia. This included a comprehensive literature review, interviews with couples in which one partner has dementia, and consultation meetings with expert groups of people with dementia and partners in both Sweden and the UK. The co-researcher process and the expert meetings informed four main themes with corresponding sub-themes that couples with dementia considered as important to their wellbeing in their everyday lives: (1) Home and Neighbourhood, (2) Meaningful Activities and Relationships, (3) Approach and Empowerment, and (4) Couplehood. The themes were further developed and integrated into the multimedia application DemPower, which was developed for the delivery of the intervention. The third part Testing and Evaluating describes a feasibility study (study III) in which the DemPower application was tested for feasibility and acceptability among couples in Sweden and the UK. The results of the feasibility study indicated that the DemPower intervention was feasible and acceptable among couples in which one partner has dementia living at home. The testing and evaluating part also comprise a qualitative study (study IV) that explores the experiences of engaging with DemPower together as a couple living with dementia in Sweden. The findings resulted in the three themes: (1) Growth of the relationship, (2) We are not alone, and (3) Positive approach, which the couples appreciated and associated with the resource-oriented and salutogenic approach of DemPower. The overall findings of the thesis are presented in a concluding synthesis at the end of the thesis. The concluding synthesis, focused on "Meaningfulness", "Empowering health promotion", "Normalization" and "Transitions and couplehood", represents the core findings of this thesis
Doktorn kunde inte riktigt laga mig
Den här boken handlar om små barn som har svåra sjukdomar eller funktionsnedsättningar. Barn som också har stora frågor, hemliga tankar och starka känslor. Vad betyder det för ett litet barn att inte kunna gå och springa, att inte kunna se, att ha trassliga och krångliga tankar, att vara annorlunda?
Christina Renlund visar hur vi kan hjälpa barnen att våga berätta om sina tankar och komma med sina frågor. Som läsare får man konkreta råd och tips om tekniker, lekar och övningar som hjälper barnen att formulera sina tankar och att uppnå en bättre självkänsla. Vi får också möta tre barn som går i barnterapi. De lär oss något om vad barn med funktionshinder möter i sina liv.
Don't hit my mommy: A manual for child parent psychotherapy with young witnesses of family violence
This practical handbook offers treatment guidelines to address the behavioral and mental health problems of young children whose most intimate relationships are disrupted by the experience of violence. Practitioners from a variety of disciplines will gain an understanding of the impact of violence and will discover concrete intervention strategies to address the consequences of this experience for young children.
Drastisk ökning av unga som slutenvårdas efter självskada : läkemedel vanligaste skademetod ; originalstudie
Dregling hos barn och ungdomar
Dregling är ett vanligt symtom hos barn med orofaciala funktionsnedsättningar. Svårigheter med att kontrollera sin saliv upplevs ofta som ett stort problem både av barnet självt och av omgivningen. På Mun-H-Center märker vi på flera sätt att det finns ett stort behov av kunskap om utredningsmöjligheter och behandling av dreglingsproblematik. I den här skriften om behandling av dregling finns information om orsaker och om olika behandlingsalternativ
Drömjobb för en dotter
Drömmen om dagcentralen : Omsorgsformer och språk bland utlandsfödda i Malmö (FoU-rapport 2007:2).
Du ska vårda din mamma : Tema familj.
Du som jobbar med anhöriga och äldre
Du, jag och något att tala om - om kommunikation och kommunikationshjälpmedel för och med barn och ungdomar med flerfunktionsnedsättning
Detta är en guide för föräldrar om kommunikation och kommunikationshjälpmedel för barn och
ungdomar med flerfunktionsnedsättning, baserad på aktuell forskning och praktik. Eftersom kommunikationshjälpmedel alltid används tillsammans med andra kommunikationssätt, aldrig helt ensamma,handlar boken också om kommunikation i allmänhet. Kunskapsöversikten inleds med en genomgång av vad det innebär att ha en flerfunktionsnedsättning och vad som menas med Alternativ och Kompletterande Kommunikation (AKK). Därefter går författaren igenom de tidiga stegen i kommunikationsutvecklingen och olika sätt att kartlägga kommunikation. Läsaren får bekanta sig med olika kommunikationssätt (manuella tecken, bilder, symbolsystem och konkreta föremål) och olika typer av samtalshjälpmedel och styrsätt. Stor vikt läggs vid pedagogiska råd kring att lära sig använda AKK och boken innehåller många exempel och beskrivningar av olika strategier och hur de kan tillämpas vid användning av olika hjälpmedel. Avslutningsvis finns det referenser och länkar till olika resurser som kan vara till nytta både för föräldrar och yrkesverksamma inom området
Dyadic interaction with a child with multiple disabilities: A system theory perspective on communication
A mutually rewarding communicative interaction with a child whose development is atypical presents unique challenges that have to be met through the implementation of unique strategies by both partners in a dyad. The aim of this study was to provide a description, interpretation, and model for communicative interaction in a particular dyad that comprised a child with severe multiple disabilities who functioned at a presymbolic level and his caregiver. A qualitative, inductive approach focused on process analysis was used to examine a videotaped interaction between a 6-year-old boy with severe multiple disabilities and his caregiver in a play session at pre-school. System theory was used as a theoretical and conceptual framework to analyse the communicative process. Co-regulation, consensual frames, and system dynamics were used as key concepts to examine how the behaviors of the child and the behaviors of the adult were related to each other and how the partners co-created meaning in their interaction. As a result of the analysis, two models are presented. The first is a model of how a hierarchical order of consensual frames is built. The second model is a process map that provides an illustration of the communication dynamics. It is suggested that a system theory approach could be a useful framework, not only to explain results, but also as an analytical tool to provide more dyad-specific interaction models as a basis for individualized interventions. © 2004 Taylor & Francis Ltd.
Dyadic Intervention for Family Caregivers and Care Receivers in Early-Stage Dementia
Dygnsvård för barn och ungdom 1983-1995: Förändringar i vårdlandskapet sedan socialtjänstens tillkomst
Dygnsvård för barn och ungdom 1983-1995: Förändringar i vårdlandskapet sedan socialtjänstens tillkomst
Dynamic Privacy Assessment in a Smart House Environment Using Multimodal Sensing
Döden angår oss alla. Värdig vård vid livets slut. SOU 2001:6
Exploring Comprehensibility and Manageability in Palliative Home Care: An Interview Study of Dying Cancer Patients' Informal Carers
The presence of an informal carer is often a prerequisite for successful palliative home care, and the staffs ability to support informal carers' coping in such situations is important. Recent research has revealed that it is possible to achieve positive psychological states in palliative care despite the burdening situation. As there is a lack of theory-based coping studies, the aim of this study was to describe, within the context of palliative home care, two concepts in Antonovsky's theory of Sense of Coherence: comprehensibility (a perception that the challenge is understood) and manageability (a perception that the resources to cope are available). Tape-recorded semi-structured interviews with 19 informal carers during ongoing palliative home care were transcribed and analysed with a qualitative hermeneutic approach. Elements that facilitated comprehensibility included open information, symbolic information, basic life assumptions and previous knowledge. These were important for creating a congruent inner reality (as opposed to chaos). Resources contributing to manageability dealt with power, support, competence and accessibility, which on a more abstract level resulted in a feeling of togetherness (as opposed to isolation). The findings are discussed in relation to the complexity of communication between staff and carers within palliative care. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA ) (journal abstract)
Exploring comprehensibility and manageability in palliative home care: An interview study of dying cancer patients' informal carers
Exploring Comprehensibility and Manageability in Palliative Home Care: An Interview Study of Dying Cancer Patients' Informal Carers
The presence of an informal carer is often a prerequisite for successful palliative home care, and the staffs ability to support informal carers' coping in such situations is important. Recent research has revealed that it is possible to achieve positive psychological states in palliative care despite the burdening situation. As there is a lack of theory-based coping studies, the aim of this study was to describe, within the context of palliative home care, two concepts in Antonovsky's theory of Sense of Coherence: comprehensibility (a perception that the challenge is understood) and manageability (a perception that the resources to cope are available). Tape-recorded semi-structured interviews with 19 informal carers during ongoing palliative home care were transcribed and analysed with a qualitative hermeneutic approach. Elements that facilitated comprehensibility included open information, symbolic information, basic life assumptions and previous knowledge. These were important for creating a congruent inner reality (as opposed to chaos). Resources contributing to manageability dealt with power, support, competence and accessibility, which on a more abstract level resulted in a feeling of togetherness (as opposed to isolation). The findings are discussed in relation to the complexity of communication between staff and carers within palliative care. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2007 APA ) (journal abstract)
Exploring 'couplehood' in dementia : A constructivist grounded theory study = parrelationer i förändring vid demenssjukdom : En studie med konstruktivistisk grundad teori (Institutionen för medicin och hälsa, 895).
Exploring 'couplehood' in dementia : a constructivist grounded theory study. Parrelationer i förändring vid demenssjukdom - en studie med konstruktivistisk grundad teori
Linköping University medical dissertations, 0345-0082 ; 895
Exploring factors and caregiver outcomes associated with feelings of preparedness for caregiving in family caregivers in palliative care: a correlational, cross-sectional study
BACKGROUND: Family caregivers in palliative care often report feeling
insufficiently prepared to handle the caregiver role. Preparedness has been
confirmed as a variable that may actually protect family caregiver well-being.
Preparedness refers to how ready family caregivers perceive they are for the
tasks and demands in the caregiving role.
AIM: The aim of this study was to explore factors associated with preparedness
and to further investigate whether preparedness is associated with caregiver
outcomes.
DESIGN: This was a correlational study using a cross-sectional design.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: The study took place in three specialist palliative care
units and one haematology unit. A total of 125 family caregivers of patients with
life-threatening illness participated.
RESULT: Preparedness was significantly associated with higher levels of hope and
reward and with a lower level of anxiety. In contrast, preparedness was not
associated with depression or health. Being female and cohabiting with the
patient were significantly associated with a higher level of preparedness. The
relationship to the patient was significantly associated with preparedness, while
social support, place of care, time since diagnosis and age of the patients
showed no association.
CONCLUSION: Feelings of preparedness seem to be important for how family
caregivers experience the unique situation when caring for a patient who is
severely ill and close to death. Our findings support the inclusion of
preparedness in support models for family caregivers in palliative care.
Psycho-educational interventions could preferably be designed aiming to increase
family caregiver's preparedness to care, including practical care, communication
and emotional support.
Harmonisk bild av Sverige ifrågasätts : Tillit är kittet för ett välfungerande samhälle ; internationellt sett är Sverige känt för en hög grad av tillit, en bild som nu utmanas av forskare vid Ersta Sköndal Högskola
Health and care in an enlarged Europe
Health and Care in an Enlarged Europe.
Examining quality of life in 28 European countries, including the acceding and candidate countries as well as the current Member States of the EU, this report explores how Europeans perceive their health, to what extent they display healthy and unhealthy lifestyles, how easily they can access their national health care system and how satisfied they are with its performance.The analysis is based on data from the European Commission's Eurobarometer survey carried out in the acceding and candidate countries in Spring 2002 and standard EU 15 Eurobarometers. A summary of this report is also available
Health and consumtion of health care and social service among old migrants in Sweden
Health and daily living form, manual (2nd ed).
Health and well-being among 70-years old migrants living in Sweden - results from the H 70 gerontological and geriatric population studies in Göteborg
Health and wellbeing in informal caregivers and non-caregivers: a comparative cross-sectional study of the Swedish general population
BACKGROUND: Informal caregiving by relatives is a great resource for individuals
as well as for society, but the caregiving role is associated with health
problems for the caregiver. This study aimed to compare caregivers' self-rated
health, number of recent days with poor health and psychological wellbeing with
that of non-caregivers in a general Swedish population.
METHODS: From 2004 to 2013, 90,845 Swedish people completed a postal
questionnaire about their health, number of recent days with poor health during
last month, psychological wellbeing and if they were performing caregiving or
not. Descriptive statistics, chi-square analysis, ANOVA, logistic regressions and
negative binomial regression models were used to investigate associations between
being a caregiver or not and health and wellbeing. Negative binomial regression
was used to assess the relation between caregiver status and recent days with
poor health or functioning.
RESULTS: Eleven percent reported having a caregiving role. Caregivers reported
poorer self-rated health compared to non-caregivers, also in adjusted models;
odds ratio (OR): 1.07 with a 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.01-1.13. Caregivers
also reported lower psychological wellbeing compared to non-caregivers; OR: 1.22,
CI: 1.15-1.30. Caregiving status was associated with more recent days with poor
physical health and more recent days with poor mental health.
CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that caregivers have worse perceptions in
self-rated health and psychological wellbeing compared with non-caregivers,
indicating that the role of caregiver is adversely associated with health. This
association also appears in terms of reporting days of poor health in the last
month. The underlying mechanism of these associations, including the potential
detrimental health effects of being a caregiver, needs to be investigated in
longitudinal studies.
Health at a glance 2011. OECD indicators
This second edition of Government at a Glance almost doubles the number of available indicators of OECD governments' performance, to nearly 60.
The indicators compare the political and institutional frameworks of government across OECD countries as well as government revenues and expenditures, employment, and compensation.
This publication provides evidence for policy makers by measuring the performance of governments in a comparative perspective. This also allows countries to benchmark their performance against other countries.
There are also indicators describing government policies and practices on integrity, e-government and open government, and introduce several composite indexes summarising key aspects of public management practices in human resources management, budgeting, procurement, and regulatory management.
Senast uppdaterad 2021-01-25 av Peter Eriksson, ansvarig utgivare Lennart Magnusson