‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce

Context: Official guidance on Covid-19 failed to take account of the prevalence of dementia among people living in care homes or its implications for implementing infection control measures. Objective: To gain insight into the experience of those charged with implementing Covid-19 restrictions in...

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Main Authors: Andrea Capstick, Giorgia Previdoli, Ana Barbosa, Clare Mason
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LSE Press 2022-08-01
Series:Journal of Long-Term Care
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.journal.ilpnetwork.org/index.php/lse-j-jltc/article/view/127
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author Andrea Capstick
Giorgia Previdoli
Ana Barbosa
Clare Mason
author_facet Andrea Capstick
Giorgia Previdoli
Ana Barbosa
Clare Mason
author_sort Andrea Capstick
collection DOAJ
description Context: Official guidance on Covid-19 failed to take account of the prevalence of dementia among people living in care homes or its implications for implementing infection control measures. Objective: To gain insight into the experience of those charged with implementing Covid-19 restrictions in long-term dementia care environments. Methods: Twenty members of the long-term dementia care workforce shared their experiences, using interviews, online discussion groups, or written personal accounts. Findings: Thematic analysis identified four key aspects of the participants’ experience: 1) Confusion and stress arising from the implementation of new policies, which changed very frequently; 2) The negative impact of measures such as social isolation, PPE, and coronavirus testing on people living with dementia and their families; 3) The impact on their own mental health and well-being over time; 4) Creative problem-solving and collaboration in the face of these challenges. Analysis suggests that the social care dementia workforce faced many of the same challenges identified for acute healthcare workers, with the addition of a sense of personal bereavement and responsibility when residents died. Limitations: The study is United Kingdom (UK)-dominated. Data were collected retrospectively and relate predominantly to the first wave of the pandemic. Most participants were studying on a MSc programme on which the first and third authors teach. Implications: Future guidance to care homes must take account of the high numbers of people with cognitive difficulties living in such environments. Co-designed strategies are needed to address the longer-term implications of Covid-19 for the social care dementia workforce.
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spelling doaj.art-099de2fd16284d8abb282755c33259982023-11-12T06:24:46ZengLSE PressJournal of Long-Term Care2516-91222022-08-012022‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care WorkforceAndrea Capstick0Giorgia Previdoli1Ana Barbosa2Clare Mason3University of BradfordBradford Institute for Health ResearchUniversity of BradfordUniversity of Bradford Context: Official guidance on Covid-19 failed to take account of the prevalence of dementia among people living in care homes or its implications for implementing infection control measures. Objective: To gain insight into the experience of those charged with implementing Covid-19 restrictions in long-term dementia care environments. Methods: Twenty members of the long-term dementia care workforce shared their experiences, using interviews, online discussion groups, or written personal accounts. Findings: Thematic analysis identified four key aspects of the participants’ experience: 1) Confusion and stress arising from the implementation of new policies, which changed very frequently; 2) The negative impact of measures such as social isolation, PPE, and coronavirus testing on people living with dementia and their families; 3) The impact on their own mental health and well-being over time; 4) Creative problem-solving and collaboration in the face of these challenges. Analysis suggests that the social care dementia workforce faced many of the same challenges identified for acute healthcare workers, with the addition of a sense of personal bereavement and responsibility when residents died. Limitations: The study is United Kingdom (UK)-dominated. Data were collected retrospectively and relate predominantly to the first wave of the pandemic. Most participants were studying on a MSc programme on which the first and third authors teach. Implications: Future guidance to care homes must take account of the high numbers of people with cognitive difficulties living in such environments. Co-designed strategies are needed to address the longer-term implications of Covid-19 for the social care dementia workforce. https://account.journal.ilpnetwork.org/index.php/lse-j-jltc/article/view/127Coronavirusdementiasocial carelong-term carecare homesworkforce
spellingShingle Andrea Capstick
Giorgia Previdoli
Ana Barbosa
Clare Mason
‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce
Journal of Long-Term Care
Coronavirus
dementia
social care
long-term care
care homes
workforce
title ‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce
title_full ‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce
title_fullStr ‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce
title_full_unstemmed ‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce
title_short ‘Going through the Eye of the Storm’: The Impact of Covid-19 on the Long-Term Dementia Care Workforce
title_sort going through the eye of the storm the impact of covid 19 on the long term dementia care workforce
topic Coronavirus
dementia
social care
long-term care
care homes
workforce
url https://account.journal.ilpnetwork.org/index.php/lse-j-jltc/article/view/127
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