Dementia-friendliness: A matter of knowledge, responsibility, dignity, and illusion

2021 
Abstract Worldwide, dementia-friendly initiatives are being developed primarily based on and driven by political strategies. Health professionals, local government officials, and initiators alike are working to create dementia-friendly communities, but little is known about how professionals discursively construct dementia-friendliness and how their various interpretations affect current practices in the field. This study aimed to explore how those involved in establishing dementia-friendly initiatives, nursing homes, and dementia villages ascribe meaning to and construct dementia-friendliness. Three focus groups were conducted, including two with five health professionals each from two nursing homes for people with dementia and one with seven initiators involved in the development and establishment of nursing homes and dementia villages. We further conducted a small-group interview with a consultant and a project worker representing a local authority. Seeing dementia-friendliness as a discursive construction, we conducted a critical discourse analysis, taking inspiration from the work of Norman Fairclough. The surveyed professionals reported relying on knowledge, responsibility, dignity, and illusion discourses to construct dementia-friendliness. Our results also indicated that the construct of dementia-friendliness fosters discursive battles indicated by dilemmas concerning the adequate and dignified treatment of people with dementia and health professionals' critical stances toward the construct of dementia-friendliness.
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