Tove Harnett
Associate professor, PhD Gerontology
Framing spaces in places: Creating ''respite spaces'' in dementia care settings.
Author
Summary, in English
Research on dementia care settings has primarily focused on routine aspects of life, including mealtimes, bathing procedures, etc. However, studies rarely explore how individuals with dementia interact in these settings during the intervals between routines. This study aimed to analyze how residents actively carved out spaces that provided temporary respite from institutional life, termed “framing respite spaces”. Ethnographic data was collected over 5 months in a dementia care setting in Sweden. Frame analysis was employed to investigate residents’ shared understanding of non-task-orientated situations. The results showed that individuals with dementia adjusted to institutional order, but also actively created respite spaces through conversation. Interestingly, individuals with dementia interpreted conversational cues and often acted logically according to a shared definition of the specific situation. These findings showed that looking beyond task-orientated interactions between staff and residents can provide a more detailed picture of everyday life in dementia care settings.
Department/s
- Ageing and Eldercare
- School of Social Work
Publishing year
2014
Language
English
Pages
396-411
Publication/Series
Dementia
Volume
13
Issue
3
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Topic
- Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology
Keywords
- Dementia care settings
- Ethnography
- Dementia
- Frame analysis
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1741-2684