Staff responses to age‐related health changes in people with an intellectual disability in group homes |
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Authors: | Ruth Webber Barbara Bowers Barbara McKenzie‐Green |
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Institution: | 1. Director, Quality of Life and Social Justice Research Centre , Australian Catholic University , Fitzroy 3065, Australia;2. School of Nursing , University of Wisconsin‐Madison , Madison, Wisconsin, USA;3. School of Nursing, Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences , Auckland University of Technology , Auckland, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study was to explore how supervisors in group homes caring for people with intellectual disability responded to the development of age‐related health changes in their residents. Ten group home supervisors working in the disability sector were interviewed once. Data were analysed using Dimensional Analysis. The study identified several factors related to whether a resident could stay ‘at home’ or would need to be moved to residential aged care (nursing home) including: nature and extent of group home resources, group home staff comfort with residents’ health changes, staff skill at navigating the intersection between the disability and ageing sectors, and the supervisor’s philosophy of care. The ability of older people with an intellectual disability to ‘age in place’ is affected by staff knowledge about and comfort with age‐related illnesses, staff skills at navigating formal services, staffing flexibility, and the philosophy of group home supervisors. Despite the growing international concern for the rights of people with disability, particularly in relation to decision making, questions about the older person’s choice of residence and participation in decision making about what was best for them, were almost nonexistent. Rather, decisions were made based on what was considered to be in ‘the best interest’. |
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Keywords: | intellectual disability group home ‘ageing in place’ |
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