Understanding trauma informed support for people affected by dementia: an analysis of telephone helpline call-logs (Preprint)
Опубликована: Янв. 25, 2025
BACKGROUND
People
with
dementia
and
their
caregivers
experience
significant
psychological
distress
may
be
at
risk
of
trauma
when
coping
mechanisms
are
overwhelmed.
Specialist
helplines
play
a
vital
role
by
offering
immediate
support
information,
however,
little
is
known
about
how
call
handlers
account
for
potential
in
responses.
This
study
explored
the
extent
to
which
trauma-informed
principles
evident
responses
provided
on
UK’s
only
24-hour
helpline.
OBJECTIVE
To
explore
type
nature
calls
UK
helpline
within
staff
carers
people
dementia.
METHODS
A
retrospective
analysis
was
conducted
200
anonymised
call-logs
from
Alzheimer
Scotland’s
Data
were
analysed
using
framework
informed
(safety,
trustworthiness
&
transparency,
choice,
collaboration,
empowerment).
also
reported
theme
frequency
strength:
captured
often
each
appeared
across
dataset
(expressed
as
percentage),
while
strength
represented
researcher’s
subjective
assessment
theme’s
intensity
call-log,
measured
Likert
scale.
RESULTS
Most
(86%)
made
during
daytime
hours
‘carer/family
member/friend,’
'emotional
support'
'carer
stress'
being
primary
reasons
contact.
Call-log
aligned
several
principles,
‘collaboration’
most
frequent
response
(69.5%)
'safety'
night-time
(79.4%).
Across
all
responses,
'empowerment'
emerged
strongest
theme,
characterised
empathetic,
non-judgmental
that
acknowledged
caller
strengths.
Overall,
'collaboration'
(27%)
frequently
observed
reflecting
efforts
share
knowledge
engage
callers
relevant
resources.
Call
tailored
approach
based
caller’s
identity,
‘carers/family/friends’
displaying
collaboration
(70.4%).
Analysis
individuals
seeking
information
themselves
revealed
empowerment
themes
(73.7%).
CONCLUSIONS
The
findings
highlight
helpline's
critical
resource
emotional
experiencing
stress.
They
contribute
understanding
can
effectively
applied
such
interactions.
Implications
developing
guide
particularly
high-risk
groups
family
carers,
explored.
CLINICALTRIAL
N/A
Язык: Английский
Multimorbidity, health service use, and health insurance by socioeconomic groups in 31 countries: a multi-cohort study
Research Square (Research Square),
Год журнала:
2025,
Номер
unknown
Опубликована: Апрель 10, 2025
Abstract
The
prevalence
of
physical,
psychological,
and
cognitive
multimorbidity
is
marked
by
socioeconomic
status
(SES)
inequalities.
However,
the
relationship
between
patterns—particularly
those
involving
conditions—and
healthcare
utilization,
as
well
role
health
insurance,
remains
poorly
understood.
This
first
study
to
explore
healthcare-seeking
behaviour
among
individuals
with
assess
whether
these
vary
SES
insurance
coverage.
multicohort
analyzed
data
from
six
longitudinal
studies
across
31
countries,
including
participants
aged
50
years
older.
Multimorbidity
was
defined
coexistence
two
or
more
disorders
disorders.
Outpatient
inpatient
utilization
were
measured.
Random-effects
logistic
regression
models
employed
associations
random-effects
Poisson
visit
frequencies.
Country-specific
analyses
aggregated
via
multinational
meta-analyses
using
generate
overall
effect
sizes.
We
included
a
total
1450209
individuals.
Compared
without
any
conditions,
most
complex
pattern
had
higher
outpatient
care
(OR
3.13,
95%
CI
[2.21–4.05])
but
not
high
physical-psychological
7.83,
[6.59–9.07]).
Additionally,
association
varied
groups,
lower
experiencing
pronounced
disparities
in
use.
In
contrast,
less
pronounced.
Health
coverage
weakened
use,
especially
for
physical-psychological-cognitive
multimorbidity.
Those
stronger
likelihood
utilizing
6.14,
[5.26,
7.16])
compared
2.98,
[2.65,
3.36]).
Cognitive
further
complicate
multimorbidity,
indicating
unmet
needs,
SES.
Our
highlights
potential
mitigating
related
Язык: Английский
Multimorbidity and risk of dementia: A systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal cohort studies
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer s Disease,
Год журнала:
2025,
Номер
unknown, С. 100164 - 100164
Опубликована: Апрель 1, 2025
Язык: Английский