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FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN

Introduction. Supporting persons with dementia without increasing the demands of formal care is an issue that many countries face today. Pingtung County proposed an innovative practice of an open dementia day center situated in a dementia-friendly community (DFC), where people with dementia in the c...

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Autores principales: Chang, Ling-Hui, Pan, Men-An, Wu, Li-Xue, Lu, Chi-pang, Sung, Liwen, Huang, Pai--Chuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766147/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1363
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author Chang, Ling-Hui
Pan, Men-An
Wu, Li-Xue
Lu, Chi-pang
Sung, Liwen
Huang, Pai--Chuan
author_facet Chang, Ling-Hui
Pan, Men-An
Wu, Li-Xue
Lu, Chi-pang
Sung, Liwen
Huang, Pai--Chuan
author_sort Chang, Ling-Hui
collection PubMed
description Introduction. Supporting persons with dementia without increasing the demands of formal care is an issue that many countries face today. Pingtung County proposed an innovative practice of an open dementia day center situated in a dementia-friendly community (DFC), where people with dementia in the center can freely go outside and enjoy community living. This presentation examines the experience of an university academic team in fostering a municipality-academic-community partnership as we tried to “flip” the care of a traditional dementia day center to adopt an “open” care model and concurrently to make the nearby community dementia-friendly. Method. A pragmatic research paradigm was adopted to address the socially situated situation in which we encountered when building a dementia-friendly community and the strategies we adopted to respond to the problem. Results/Discussion. Three themes: (1) Partnering with local government, e.g. to reduce the cognitive and physical barriers for outdoors activities and to increase the competence of local officials in DFC. (2) Partnering with local community and business: e.g. to increase the DFC awareness of community volunteers and to initiate a DFC business project, (3) building an academic team: e.g. to engage faculties who were motivated to pioneer an innovative practice, to fulfill their social responsibility, bridge the gap between theory, research, and practice. Conclusion. Significant changes were made in the community and the day center towards DFC. Community stigma towards dementia and community inertia was major obstacles. The allocation of city resources, personal drive towards DFC, and regular communication were key, despite the process was fraught with compromise, power dynamics, and conflicts of interests.
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spelling pubmed-97661472022-12-20 FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN Chang, Ling-Hui Pan, Men-An Wu, Li-Xue Lu, Chi-pang Sung, Liwen Huang, Pai--Chuan Innov Aging Abstracts Introduction. Supporting persons with dementia without increasing the demands of formal care is an issue that many countries face today. Pingtung County proposed an innovative practice of an open dementia day center situated in a dementia-friendly community (DFC), where people with dementia in the center can freely go outside and enjoy community living. This presentation examines the experience of an university academic team in fostering a municipality-academic-community partnership as we tried to “flip” the care of a traditional dementia day center to adopt an “open” care model and concurrently to make the nearby community dementia-friendly. Method. A pragmatic research paradigm was adopted to address the socially situated situation in which we encountered when building a dementia-friendly community and the strategies we adopted to respond to the problem. Results/Discussion. Three themes: (1) Partnering with local government, e.g. to reduce the cognitive and physical barriers for outdoors activities and to increase the competence of local officials in DFC. (2) Partnering with local community and business: e.g. to increase the DFC awareness of community volunteers and to initiate a DFC business project, (3) building an academic team: e.g. to engage faculties who were motivated to pioneer an innovative practice, to fulfill their social responsibility, bridge the gap between theory, research, and practice. Conclusion. Significant changes were made in the community and the day center towards DFC. Community stigma towards dementia and community inertia was major obstacles. The allocation of city resources, personal drive towards DFC, and regular communication were key, despite the process was fraught with compromise, power dynamics, and conflicts of interests. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9766147/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1363 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Chang, Ling-Hui
Pan, Men-An
Wu, Li-Xue
Lu, Chi-pang
Sung, Liwen
Huang, Pai--Chuan
FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN
title FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN
title_full FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN
title_fullStr FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN
title_full_unstemmed FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN
title_short FOSTERING MULTIPARTNERSHIP IN DEVELOPING A DEMENTIA-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY WITH AN OPEN DEMENTIA DAY CENTER IN TAIWAN
title_sort fostering multipartnership in developing a dementia-friendly community with an open dementia day center in taiwan
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766147/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.1363
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