Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review. / Clarke, Chris; Woods, Bob; Moniz-Cook, Esme et al.
In: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, Vol. 18, No. 1, 249, 24.07.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Clarke, C, Woods, B, Moniz-Cook, E, Mountain, G, Øksnebjerg, L, Chattat, R, Diaz, A, Gove, D, Vernooij-Dassen, M & Wolverson, E 2020, 'Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review.', Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, vol. 18, no. 1, 249. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-020-01440-x

APA

Clarke, C., Woods, B., Moniz-Cook, E., Mountain, G., Øksnebjerg, L., Chattat, R., Diaz, A., Gove, D., Vernooij-Dassen, M., & Wolverson, E. (2020). Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, 18(1), Article 249. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-020-01440-x

CBE

Clarke C, Woods B, Moniz-Cook E, Mountain G, Øksnebjerg L, Chattat R, Diaz A, Gove D, Vernooij-Dassen M, Wolverson E. 2020. Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes. 18(1):Article 249. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-020-01440-x

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Clarke C, Woods B, Moniz-Cook E, Mountain G, Øksnebjerg L, Chattat R et al. Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes. 2020 Jul 24;18(1):249. doi: 10.1186/s12955-020-01440-x

Author

Clarke, Chris ; Woods, Bob ; Moniz-Cook, Esme et al. / Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review. In: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes. 2020 ; Vol. 18, No. 1.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Measuring the well-being of people with dementia: a conceptual scoping review.

AU - Clarke, Chris

AU - Woods, Bob

AU - Moniz-Cook, Esme

AU - Mountain, Gail

AU - Øksnebjerg, Laila

AU - Chattat, Rabih

AU - Diaz, Ana

AU - Gove, Dianne

AU - Vernooij-Dassen, M.

AU - Wolverson, E

PY - 2020/7/24

Y1 - 2020/7/24

N2 - BACKGROUND: Enabling people with dementia to 'live well' is a policy and research priority in many countries. However, instruments for measuring outcomes of psychosocial interventions designed to promote well-being in dementia are often derived from a symptom-focused, loss/deficit approach, or from broad quality of life concepts. A pan-European dementia working group called for research on the development of an alternative asset/strengths-based conceptual framework of well-being in dementia. This paper takes forward this recommendation by developing such a framework and using this to map relevant self-report outcome measures.METHODS: Three scoping reviews of published studies were conducted iteratively. First, we examined the literature on lived experiences of well-being and quality of life in people with dementia and then the wider dementia literature for application of well-being constructs. The synthesised findings generated conceptual domains of well-being in people with dementia. Corresponding self-report instruments used in dementia research were scoped, categorised within the conceptual framework and their potential value in measuring outcomes for people with dementia was examined.FINDINGS: Six conceptual domains for the measurement of well-being and 35 self-report instruments that have been used with people with dementia were identified. Six instruments were developed specifically for people with dementia, five were derived from the gerontological literature and 24 from the well-being literature. Fifteen instruments and one sub-scale have been examined for psychometric properties amongst people with dementia. To date, 20 have been used as outcome measures, with seven measuring change over time. A number of identified instruments utilise traditional retrospective Likert-scaling response formats, limiting their potential for use with some groups of people with dementia.CONCLUSION: An assets/strengths-based framework is presented, outlining structural domains for selecting self-report measures of well-being in people with dementia. It provides a foundation for enhancing research into processes and outcomes of psychosocial interventions, including instrument development, more precise matching of intervention aims with outcome measurement, and newer technology-based 'in-the-moment' measurement.

AB - BACKGROUND: Enabling people with dementia to 'live well' is a policy and research priority in many countries. However, instruments for measuring outcomes of psychosocial interventions designed to promote well-being in dementia are often derived from a symptom-focused, loss/deficit approach, or from broad quality of life concepts. A pan-European dementia working group called for research on the development of an alternative asset/strengths-based conceptual framework of well-being in dementia. This paper takes forward this recommendation by developing such a framework and using this to map relevant self-report outcome measures.METHODS: Three scoping reviews of published studies were conducted iteratively. First, we examined the literature on lived experiences of well-being and quality of life in people with dementia and then the wider dementia literature for application of well-being constructs. The synthesised findings generated conceptual domains of well-being in people with dementia. Corresponding self-report instruments used in dementia research were scoped, categorised within the conceptual framework and their potential value in measuring outcomes for people with dementia was examined.FINDINGS: Six conceptual domains for the measurement of well-being and 35 self-report instruments that have been used with people with dementia were identified. Six instruments were developed specifically for people with dementia, five were derived from the gerontological literature and 24 from the well-being literature. Fifteen instruments and one sub-scale have been examined for psychometric properties amongst people with dementia. To date, 20 have been used as outcome measures, with seven measuring change over time. A number of identified instruments utilise traditional retrospective Likert-scaling response formats, limiting their potential for use with some groups of people with dementia.CONCLUSION: An assets/strengths-based framework is presented, outlining structural domains for selecting self-report measures of well-being in people with dementia. It provides a foundation for enhancing research into processes and outcomes of psychosocial interventions, including instrument development, more precise matching of intervention aims with outcome measurement, and newer technology-based 'in-the-moment' measurement.

KW - Dementia

KW - Outcome measurement

KW - Well-being

KW - quality of life

KW - Positive Psychology

KW - Successful aging

KW - Lived experience

U2 - 10.1186/s12955-020-01440-x

DO - 10.1186/s12955-020-01440-x

M3 - Article

C2 - 32709238

VL - 18

JO - Health and Quality of Life Outcomes

JF - Health and Quality of Life Outcomes

SN - 1477-7525

IS - 1

M1 - 249

ER -