• Int J Geriatr Psychiatry · Feb 2009

    Understanding care of people with dementia in Spain: cohabitation arrangements, rotation and rejection to long term care institution.

    • Jesús Rivera, Felix Bermejo, Manuel Franco, José Manuel Morales-González, and Julian Benito-León.
    • Universidad de Salamanca, Departamento de Sociología y Comunicación, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Salamanca, Spain. jrivera@usal.es
    • Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2009 Feb 1; 24 (2): 142-8.

    BackgroundMost people with dementia in Spain live at home with their families. Current changes in the family structure are transforming the care of people with dementia through new cohabitation arrangenments and rotation practices.ObjectiveTo describe the cohabitation arrangements of families of people with dementia in Spain and to understand the caregivers' characteristics related to rotation and the rejection of long term care institutions.MethodsA cross sectional study -NEDICES study- was conducted using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies.150 caregivers of people with dementia from two communities from Madrid, Spain, were surveyed using a questionnaire designed to describe cohabitation arrangements and care. Qualitative methods included: 13 caregivers participating in focus groups, and 3 caregivers in Semi Structured Interviews aimed to understand rotation practices and rejection to long term care institution.ResultsCharacteristics related with rotation were: sex of persons with dementia, widowhood, socio-economic status, caregiver relationship and burden of the caregiver. The qualitative study showed that the use of the rotation was related to normative behaviors and with obligation feelings, along with a change in the role of women in the current Spanish family. The use of long term care institutions was related to geographical distance of the family.ConclusionsThe results of this study suggest that rotation has appeared in Spain as a new mechanism of care for people with dementia, and its related to the rejection of long term care institutions.(c) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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