Frontiers in Psychiatry (Sep 2024)

Social health markers in the context of cognitive decline and dementia: an international qualitative study

  • Martina S. Kristanti,
  • Myrra Vernooij-Dassen,
  • Yun-Hee Jeon,
  • Eline Verspoor,
  • Suraj Samtani,
  • Giovanni Ottoboni,
  • Rabih Chattat,
  • Henry Brodaty,
  • Marta Lenart-Bugla,
  • Krzysztof Kowalski,
  • Joanna Rymaszewska,
  • Dorota M. Szczesniak,
  • Ansgar Gerhardus,
  • Imke Seifert,
  • Muhamad Zulvatul A’la,
  • Christantie Effendy,
  • Marieke Perry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1384636
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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BackgroundSocial health in the context of dementia has recently gained interest. The development of a social health conceptual framework at the individual and social environmental levels, has revealed a critical need for a further exploration of social health markers that can be used in the development of dementia intervention and to construct social health measures.ObjectiveTo identify social health markers in the context of dementia.MethodThis international qualitative study included six countries: Australia, Germany, Indonesia, Italy, Poland, and the Netherlands. Using purposive sampling, three to five cases per country were recruited to the study, with each case consisting of a person living with dementia, a primary informal caregiver, an active network member, and a health care professional involved in the care of the person with dementia. In-depth interviews, using an agreed topic guide, and content analysis were conducted to identify known and new social health markers. The codes were then categorized against our conceptual framework of social health.ResultsSixty-seven participants were interviewed. We identified various social health markers, ranging from those that are commonly used in epidemiological studies such as loneliness to novel markers of social health at the individual and the social environmental level. Examples of novel individual-level markers were efforts to comply with social norms and making own choices in, for example, keeping contact or refusing support. At a social environmental level, examples of novel markers were proximity (physical distance) and the function of the social network of helping the person maintaining dignity.ConclusionsThe current study identified both well-known and novel social health markers in the context of dementia, mapped to the social health framework we developed. Future research should focus on translating these markers into validated measures and on developing social health focused interventions for persons with dementia.

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