Living at the farm, innovative nursing home care for people with dementia- study protocol of an observational longitudinal study

B. de Boer*, J.P.H. Hamers, H.C. Beerens, S.M.G. Zwakhalen, F.E.S. Tan, H. Verbeek

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: In nursing home care, new care environments directed towards small-scale and homelike environments are developing. The green care farm, which provides 24-h nursing home care for people with dementia, is one such new care environment. Knowledge is needed on the relation between environmental features of green care farms such as nature, domesticity and offering care in small groups and the influence on the daily lives of residents. The aim of this study is to explore (1) the daily lives of residents, (2) the quality of care and (3) the experiences of caregivers on green care farms compared with other nursing home care environments.

Methods/design: An observational longitudinal study including a baseline and a six-month follow-up measurement is carried out. Four types of nursing home care environments are included: (1) large scale nursing home ward, (2) small scale living facility on the terrain of a larger nursing home (3) stand-alone small scale living facility and (4) green care farm. Quality of care is examined through structure, process and outcome indicators. The primary outcome measure is the daily life of residents, assessed by ecological momentary assessments. Aspects of daily life include (1) activity (activity performed by the resident, the engagement in this activity and the degree of physical effort); (2) physical environment (the location of the resident and the interaction with the physical environment); (3) social environment (the level and type of social interaction, and with whom this social interaction took place) and (4) psychological wellbeing (mood and agitation). In addition, social engagement, quality of life, behavioral symptoms and agitation are evaluated through questionnaires. Furthermore, demographics, cognitive impairment, functional dependence and the severity of dementia are assessed. Semi-structured interviews are performed with caregivers regarding their experiences with the different nursing home care environments.

Discussion: This is the first study investigating green care farms providing 24-h nursing home care for people with dementia. The study provides valuable insight into the daily lives of residents, the quality of care, and the experiences of caregivers at green care farms in comparison with other nursing home care environments including small-scale care environments and large scale nursing home wards.

Original languageEnglish
Article number144
Number of pages9
JournalBMC Geriatrics
Volume15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Nov 2015

Keywords

  • Activities
  • Daily life
  • Dementia
  • Green care farms
  • Institutional long-term care
  • Nursing home care environments
  • Quality of care
  • Quality of life
  • Social engagement
  • QUALITY-OF-LIFE
  • LONG-TERM-CARE
  • SMALL-SCALE
  • NEUROPSYCHIATRIC INVENTORY
  • RESIDENTS
  • RELIABILITY
  • INSTRUMENT
  • FACILITIES
  • MODEL
  • ENVIRONMENTS

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