Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- About the authors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Studying family care practices
- 2 From strategy to service: practices of identification and the work of organizing dementia services
- 3 How to support care at home? Using film to surface the situated priorities of differently positioned ‘stakeholders’
- 4 Negotiating everyday life with dementia: four families
- 5 Relations between formal and family care: divergent practices in care at home for people living with dementia
- 6 Patterning dementia
- 7 Borders and helpfulness
- 8 How to sustain a good life with dementia?
- References
- Index
3 - How to support care at home? Using film to surface the situated priorities of differently positioned ‘stakeholders’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- About the authors
- Acknowledgements
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Studying family care practices
- 2 From strategy to service: practices of identification and the work of organizing dementia services
- 3 How to support care at home? Using film to surface the situated priorities of differently positioned ‘stakeholders’
- 4 Negotiating everyday life with dementia: four families
- 5 Relations between formal and family care: divergent practices in care at home for people living with dementia
- 6 Patterning dementia
- 7 Borders and helpfulness
- 8 How to sustain a good life with dementia?
- References
- Index
Summary
We started our book with a description of ‘traditional’ narratives for understanding the problem of dementia for our communities. We have already noted that these ‘traditional’ or common ways of thinking about policies designed to address the problem of dementia frequently frame solutions in economic terms. With growing numbers of people affected by the disease, and with limited institutional resources for meeting that demand, the home is figured within policy documents as a location best suited – that is, most economical from a policy perspective – for people living with dementia. Our first two chapters have created opportunities for us to raise questions about this common formulation.
In Chapter 1 we pointed out how traditional economic formulations framing the problem of dementia might actually be excluding other, less traditional, less common, but possibly more inclusive, ways of understanding the problem of dementia. The near-exclusive framing of dementia as an economic problem means that very little space is left to describe the thickness of problems (Savaransky, 2018, p 217) associated with living, everyday, with a diagnosis of dementia. In Chapter 4 we begin to explore this thickness of problems by introducing readers to the families who shared time with us to help us know better what everyday life living with a diagnosis of dementia is like.
But it is not only in everyday lives in homes where thickness can be described. In Chapter 2 we presented a ‘thick’ reading of practices associated with policies that constitute the home as the ‘best place’ for people living with dementia to receive care. We showed how, with an interest in mapping the population for the purposes of gathering knowledge of the (economic) scale of the dementia problem, programmes designed for early diagnosis are created and mobilized in the community. But we also saw how unstable those programmes are. Despite common formulations of institutions as powerful, we saw how the ideal programme requires navigation through a complex system of health and social supports. And, as even personnel associated with those health and social support programmes recognize, navigation may be experienced more as a ‘unicorn’ rather than the everyday reality of seeking help.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Care at Home for People Living with DementiaDelaying Institutionalization, Sustaining Families, pp. 45 - 64Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021