Impact of COVID-19 on Relationship-Centred Residential Dining Practices

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Abstract

This study describes changes in dining practices and provider perspectives on meal-related challenges due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. An online survey was disseminated between July and September 2020 through stakeholder networks and social media with 1,036 respondents. Altered dining practices included residents eating in rooms (54.3%), spacing residents in common areas for meals (69.3%), and disposable dish use (44.9%). The most common mealtime challenges were reduced socializing opportunities at meals (29.3%), inadequate staffing (22.8%), reduced family/volunteer help (16.7%), and assisting residents to eat (10.5%). Many participants (72.2%) felt conflict balancing safety and relationship-centred care. Geographic region, home size, building age, respondent's job title, pre-pandemic relationship-centred practices, and mealtime satisfaction, and some pandemic-initiated practices were associated with mealtime challenges and feeling conflicted in binary logistic regression analyses. Considering trade-offs between safety and relational aspects of mealtimes during the pandemic is crucial.

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APA

Keller, H. H., Trinca, V., Dakkak, H., Wu, S. A., Bovee, S., Carrier, N., … Quiring, S. (2021). Impact of COVID-19 on Relationship-Centred Residential Dining Practices. Canadian Journal on Aging, 40(4), 604–618. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0714980821000568

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