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Neighbourhoods and dementia in the health and social care context: A realist review of the literature and implications for UK policy development

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Neighbourhoods and dementia in the health and social care context: A realist review of the literature and implications for UK policy development. / Keady, John; Campbell, Sarah; Barnes, Helen et al.
In: Reviews in Clinical Gerontology, Vol. 22, No. 2, 05.2012, p. 150-163.

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Keady J, Campbell S, Barnes H, Ward R, Li X, Swarbrick C et al. Neighbourhoods and dementia in the health and social care context: A realist review of the literature and implications for UK policy development. Reviews in Clinical Gerontology. 2012 May;22(2):150-163. doi: 10.1017/S0959259811000268

Author

Keady, John ; Campbell, Sarah ; Barnes, Helen et al. / Neighbourhoods and dementia in the health and social care context: A realist review of the literature and implications for UK policy development. In: Reviews in Clinical Gerontology. 2012 ; Vol. 22, No. 2. pp. 150-163.

Bibtex

@article{8b1a7a23d1ec409aaf4f0ae7ca829d7b,
title = "Neighbourhoods and dementia in the health and social care context: A realist review of the literature and implications for UK policy development",
abstract = "The National Dementia Strategy in England has performed an essential role in transforming health and social care services and improving the commissioning architecture. However, to date, little attention has been paid to understanding the ways in which the outdoor and built environment impacts and intersects with the lives of people with dementia and their carers. One way of better understanding the outdoor and built environment is through a focus on the 'neighbourhood' as this is an area of public policy where attempts are being made across disciplines to unpack its meanings, significance and identity. This paper adopts a realist review method to detail the key findings and messages from the body of work that links the experience of living with dementia to the neighbourhood. Our findings from this review are assimilated and defined/presented under three headings, namely: outdoor spaces, built environment, and everyday technologies. These headings and our definitions are not discrete properties and there is some overlap in content. We found no research that sets out to enquire about how people with dementia might define their neighbourhood or that explores everyday neighbourhood practices for those living with the condition. Emerging concepts such as citizenship and, in the UK, the Coalition Government advancement of the 'Big Society', promote a vision of civic responsibilities and networked, dementia-capable communities, but evaluation of such initiatives are virtually absent from the literature. The review did uncover some interesting and innovative research methods that extend neighbourhood working, such as the 'walking interview'. In order to develop a neighbourhood model for dementia, future research should examine the relationship and interaction between the neighbourhood as a social space and as a physical space alongside the active role of people with dementia as 'place-makers'. Copyright {\textcopyright} Cambridge University Press 2012.",
keywords = "built environment, dementia, neighbourhoods, outdoor spaces, public health",
author = "John Keady and Sarah Campbell and Helen Barnes and Richard Ward and Xia Li and Caroline Swarbrick and Simon Burrow and Ruth Elvish",
year = "2012",
month = may,
doi = "10.1017/S0959259811000268",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "150--163",
journal = "Reviews in Clinical Gerontology",
issn = "0959-2598",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neighbourhoods and dementia in the health and social care context: A realist review of the literature and implications for UK policy development

AU - Keady, John

AU - Campbell, Sarah

AU - Barnes, Helen

AU - Ward, Richard

AU - Li, Xia

AU - Swarbrick, Caroline

AU - Burrow, Simon

AU - Elvish, Ruth

PY - 2012/5

Y1 - 2012/5

N2 - The National Dementia Strategy in England has performed an essential role in transforming health and social care services and improving the commissioning architecture. However, to date, little attention has been paid to understanding the ways in which the outdoor and built environment impacts and intersects with the lives of people with dementia and their carers. One way of better understanding the outdoor and built environment is through a focus on the 'neighbourhood' as this is an area of public policy where attempts are being made across disciplines to unpack its meanings, significance and identity. This paper adopts a realist review method to detail the key findings and messages from the body of work that links the experience of living with dementia to the neighbourhood. Our findings from this review are assimilated and defined/presented under three headings, namely: outdoor spaces, built environment, and everyday technologies. These headings and our definitions are not discrete properties and there is some overlap in content. We found no research that sets out to enquire about how people with dementia might define their neighbourhood or that explores everyday neighbourhood practices for those living with the condition. Emerging concepts such as citizenship and, in the UK, the Coalition Government advancement of the 'Big Society', promote a vision of civic responsibilities and networked, dementia-capable communities, but evaluation of such initiatives are virtually absent from the literature. The review did uncover some interesting and innovative research methods that extend neighbourhood working, such as the 'walking interview'. In order to develop a neighbourhood model for dementia, future research should examine the relationship and interaction between the neighbourhood as a social space and as a physical space alongside the active role of people with dementia as 'place-makers'. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012.

AB - The National Dementia Strategy in England has performed an essential role in transforming health and social care services and improving the commissioning architecture. However, to date, little attention has been paid to understanding the ways in which the outdoor and built environment impacts and intersects with the lives of people with dementia and their carers. One way of better understanding the outdoor and built environment is through a focus on the 'neighbourhood' as this is an area of public policy where attempts are being made across disciplines to unpack its meanings, significance and identity. This paper adopts a realist review method to detail the key findings and messages from the body of work that links the experience of living with dementia to the neighbourhood. Our findings from this review are assimilated and defined/presented under three headings, namely: outdoor spaces, built environment, and everyday technologies. These headings and our definitions are not discrete properties and there is some overlap in content. We found no research that sets out to enquire about how people with dementia might define their neighbourhood or that explores everyday neighbourhood practices for those living with the condition. Emerging concepts such as citizenship and, in the UK, the Coalition Government advancement of the 'Big Society', promote a vision of civic responsibilities and networked, dementia-capable communities, but evaluation of such initiatives are virtually absent from the literature. The review did uncover some interesting and innovative research methods that extend neighbourhood working, such as the 'walking interview'. In order to develop a neighbourhood model for dementia, future research should examine the relationship and interaction between the neighbourhood as a social space and as a physical space alongside the active role of people with dementia as 'place-makers'. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012.

KW - built environment

KW - dementia

KW - neighbourhoods

KW - outdoor spaces

KW - public health

U2 - 10.1017/S0959259811000268

DO - 10.1017/S0959259811000268

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 150

EP - 163

JO - Reviews in Clinical Gerontology

JF - Reviews in Clinical Gerontology

SN - 0959-2598

IS - 2

ER -