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The Changing Care of Older Adults With Bipolar Disorder: A Narrative Analysis

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The Changing Care of Older Adults With Bipolar Disorder: A Narrative Analysis. / Warner, Aaron; Palmier-Claus, Jasper; Holland, Carol et al.
In: Qualitative Health Research, 30.07.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Warner A, Palmier-Claus J, Holland C, Tyler E, Rhodes V, Settle G et al. The Changing Care of Older Adults With Bipolar Disorder: A Narrative Analysis. Qualitative Health Research. 2024 Jul 30. Epub 2024 Jul 30. doi: 10.1177/10497323241263043

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@article{cdd4ce69f728462ea7faa93442d624b0,
title = "The Changing Care of Older Adults With Bipolar Disorder: A Narrative Analysis",
abstract = "Older adults with bipolar disorder experience distinct challenges compared to younger age groups with bipolar disorder. They potentially require adaptations to the care they receive. This study aimed to explore experiences of care and changing care needs in older adults with bipolar disorder. People with bipolar disorder (aged ≥60) were recruited through three NHS Trusts in the North West of England, charity organisations, a confidential university participant database, and social media. Participants completed single time-point biographical narrative interviews, which were analysed using narrative analysis. Sixteen participants' accounts led to the creation of four themes: (1) 'Navigating the disruption caused by diagnosis'; (2) 'The removal of services that provided hope'; (3) 'Later life: We are on our own now'; and (4) 'Changing care needs in later life: We still need support'. The care needs of older adults with bipolar disorder appear to change over time, and services often fail to offer adequate, tailored care for this group at present. Current support requires adaptation to be effective and appropriate and to enable this group to age well in later life.",
author = "Aaron Warner and Jasper Palmier-Claus and Carol Holland and Elizabeth Tyler and Verity Rhodes and Geoff Settle and Fiona Lobban",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1177/10497323241263043",
language = "English",
journal = "Qualitative Health Research",
issn = "1049-7323",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Changing Care of Older Adults With Bipolar Disorder

T2 - A Narrative Analysis

AU - Warner, Aaron

AU - Palmier-Claus, Jasper

AU - Holland, Carol

AU - Tyler, Elizabeth

AU - Rhodes, Verity

AU - Settle, Geoff

AU - Lobban, Fiona

PY - 2024/7/30

Y1 - 2024/7/30

N2 - Older adults with bipolar disorder experience distinct challenges compared to younger age groups with bipolar disorder. They potentially require adaptations to the care they receive. This study aimed to explore experiences of care and changing care needs in older adults with bipolar disorder. People with bipolar disorder (aged ≥60) were recruited through three NHS Trusts in the North West of England, charity organisations, a confidential university participant database, and social media. Participants completed single time-point biographical narrative interviews, which were analysed using narrative analysis. Sixteen participants' accounts led to the creation of four themes: (1) 'Navigating the disruption caused by diagnosis'; (2) 'The removal of services that provided hope'; (3) 'Later life: We are on our own now'; and (4) 'Changing care needs in later life: We still need support'. The care needs of older adults with bipolar disorder appear to change over time, and services often fail to offer adequate, tailored care for this group at present. Current support requires adaptation to be effective and appropriate and to enable this group to age well in later life.

AB - Older adults with bipolar disorder experience distinct challenges compared to younger age groups with bipolar disorder. They potentially require adaptations to the care they receive. This study aimed to explore experiences of care and changing care needs in older adults with bipolar disorder. People with bipolar disorder (aged ≥60) were recruited through three NHS Trusts in the North West of England, charity organisations, a confidential university participant database, and social media. Participants completed single time-point biographical narrative interviews, which were analysed using narrative analysis. Sixteen participants' accounts led to the creation of four themes: (1) 'Navigating the disruption caused by diagnosis'; (2) 'The removal of services that provided hope'; (3) 'Later life: We are on our own now'; and (4) 'Changing care needs in later life: We still need support'. The care needs of older adults with bipolar disorder appear to change over time, and services often fail to offer adequate, tailored care for this group at present. Current support requires adaptation to be effective and appropriate and to enable this group to age well in later life.

U2 - 10.1177/10497323241263043

DO - 10.1177/10497323241263043

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 39076026

JO - Qualitative Health Research

JF - Qualitative Health Research

SN - 1049-7323

ER -