Background: The ageing of people with intellectual disability, accompanied with consequences like dementia, challenges intellectual disability-care staff and creates a need for supporting methods, with Dementia Care Mapping (DCM) as a promising possibility. This study examined the effect of DCM on the quality of life of older people with intellectual disability. Methods: We performed a quasi-experimental study in 23 group homes for older people with intellectual disability in the Netherlands, comparing DCM (n = 113) with care-as-usual (CAU; n = 111). Using three measures, we assessed the staff-reported quality of life of older people with intellectual disability. Results: DCM achieved no significantly better or worse quality of life than CAU. Effect sizes varied from 0.01 to −0.22. Adjustments for covariates and restriction of analyses to people with dementia yielded similar results. Conclusion: The finding that DCM does not increase quality of life of older people with intellectual disability contradicts previous findings and deserves further study.
CITATION STYLE
Schaap, F. D., Dijkstra, G. J., Stewart, R. E., Finnema, E. J., & Reijneveld, S. A. (2019). Effects of Dementia Care Mapping on well-being and quality of life of older people with intellectual disability: A quasi-experimental study. Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 32(4), 849–860. https://doi.org/10.1111/jar.12576
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