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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12509
Title: THE SOCIAL EXPERIENCES OF SPOUSES OF PERSONS WITH YOUNG-ONSET DEMENTIA
Authors: Hawkins, Stacey A.
Advisor: McAiney, Carrie
Jenny Ploeg; Margaret Denton
Department: Health and Aging
Keywords: young-onset;dementia;caregiver;spouse;social;experience;Clinical and Medical Social Work;Cognitive Neuroscience;Community Engagement;Community Health;Diseases;Family, Life Course, and Society;Geriatric Nursing;Geriatrics;Health Services Research;Inequality and Stratification;Leisure Studies;Marriage and Family Therapy and Counseling;Medicine and Health;Mental and Social Health;Neurology;Neuroscience and Neurobiology;Neurosciences;Nursing;Other Kinesiology;Other Social and Behavioral Sciences;Other Sociology;Primary Care;Psychiatric and Mental Health;Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing;Psychiatry;Quantitative, Qualitative, Comparative, and Historical Methodologies;Recreational Therapy;Regional Sociology;Rehabilitation and Therapy;Social and Behavioral Sciences;Social Psychology and Interaction;Social Work;Sociology;Sports Sciences;Sports Studies;Clinical and Medical Social Work
Publication Date: Oct-2012
Abstract: <p>Spousal caregivers of persons with young-onset dementia (YOD) are known to experience significant social impacts, including family conflict, social avoidance, and marginalization. However, no qualitative study has examined the social experiences of YOD spousal caregivers within the Canadian context. This thesis examined the described social experiences of these caregivers. A descriptive, qualitative approach was used to study the nature of these social experiences using in-depth, semi-structured interviews. Ten YOD spousal caregivers living in Ontario completed the study. Four themes emerged from the analysis: sources of social support, giving up activities in favour of new activities, adapting and maintaining in social and recreational activities, and social spaces as safe spaces. Concepts of caregiver social adaptation, and choosing to give up social and recreational activities in favour of new ones builds upon existing research on theories of social support, activity restriction, caregiver adaptation, and avoidance previously described in the existing dementia literature. Themes of giving up activities in favour of new activities, and social spaces as safe spaces also represent new themes not previously discussed in the dementia caregiving literature. Previous, socially-relevant research on YOD spousal caregiving has focused primarily on examining social impacts, with little attention paid to caregiver perceptions of their social experiences in the Canadian context. These findings indicate that caregiving for a spouse with YOD entails complex social experiences, which extend beyond value-laden depictions of social outcomes recorded in the existing literature. These rich experiences challenge and expand our theoretical understanding of spousal caregiving for persons with YOD.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12509
Identifier: opendissertations/7390
8446
3336677
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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