Healthcare (May 2024)

Chatting: Family Carers’ Perspectives on Receiving Support from Dementia Crisis Teams

  • Marcus Redley,
  • Fiona Poland,
  • Juanita Hoe,
  • Tom Dening,
  • Miriam Stanyon,
  • Jen Yates,
  • Amy Streater,
  • Dons Coleston-Shields,
  • Martin Orrell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12111122
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 1122

Abstract

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Family caregivers are vital to enabling people with dementia to live longer in their own homes. For these caregivers, chatting with clinicians—being listened to empathetically and receiving reassurance—can be seen as not incidental but important to supporting them. This paper considers and identifies the significance of this relational work for family carers by re-examining data originally collected to document caregivers’ perspectives on quality in crisis response teams. This reveals that chatting, for family caregivers, comprises three related features: (i) that family caregivers by responding to a person’s changing and sometimes challenging needs and behaviors inhabit a precarious equilibrium; (ii) that caregivers greatly appreciate ‘chatting’ with visiting clinicians; and (iii) that while caregivers appreciate these chats, they can be highly critical of the institutionalized character of a crisis response team’s involvement with them.

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