Effects of Dementia Care Mapping on well-being and quality of life of older people with intellectual disability: A quasi-experimental study

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Abstract

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.

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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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