Litcius/Paper detail

Language-Based Strategies that Support Person-Centered Communication in Formal Home Care Interactions with Persons Living with Dementia

Reanne Mundadan, Marie Y. Savundranayagam, J. B. Orange, Laura L. Murray

2022Journal of Applied Gerontology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Language-based strategies are recommended to improve coherence, clarity, reciprocity, and continuity of interactions with persons living with dementia. Person-centered care is the gold standard for caring for persons with dementia. Person-centered communication (PCC) strategies include facilitation, recognition, validation, and negotiation. Little is known about which language-based strategies support PCC in home care. Accordingly, this study investigated the overlap between language-based strategies and PCC in home care interactions. Analysis of conversation of 30 audio-recorded interactions between personal support workers (PSWs) and persons living with dementia was conducted. The overlap between PCC and language-based strategies was analyzed. Of 11,347 communication units, 2578 overlapped with PCC. For facilitation, 21% were yes/no questions. For recognition, 25% were yes/no questions and 22% were affirmations. For validation, 81% were affirmations and positive feedback. Finally, 60% were yes/no questions for negotiation. The findings highlight the person-centeredness of language-based strategies. PSWs should use diverse language-based strategies that are person-centered.

Topics & Concepts

DementiaReciprocity (cultural anthropology)PsychologyConversationCLARITYFacilitationNegotiationConversation analysisMedicineSocial psychologyCommunicationSociologyDiseaseBiochemistryNeuroscienceSocial scienceChemistryPathologyPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareLanguage, Discourse, Communication StrategiesDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research