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      Capturing Interactive Occupation and Social Engagement in a Residential Dementia and Mental Health Setting Using Quantitative and Narrative Data

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          Abstract

          Objectives: Despite an abundance of research acknowledging the value of interactive occupation and social engagement for older people, and the limits to these imposed by many residential settings, there is a lack of research which measures and analyzes these concepts. This research provides a method for measuring, analysing and monitoring interactive occupation and social engagement levels of residents in a secure residential setting for older people with mental health problems and dementia. It proposes suggestions for changes to improve the well-being of residents in residential settings. Method: In this case study design, the Assessment Tool for Occupational and Social Engagement (ATOSE) provided a ‘whole room’ time sampling technique to observe resident and staff interactive occupation and social engagement within the communal sitting room over a five-week period. Researchers made contemporaneous notes to supplement the ATOSE data and to contextualise the observations. Results: Residents in the sitting room were passive, sedentary, and unengaged for 82.73% of their time. Staff, who were busy and active 98.84% of their time in the sitting room, spent 43.39% of this time in activities which did not directly engage the residents. The physical, social and occupational environments did not support interactive occupation or social engagement. Conclusions: The ATOSE assessment tool, in combination with narrative data, provides a clear measurement and analysis of interactive occupation and social engagement in this and other residential settings. Suggestions for change include a focus on the physical, social, occupational, and sensory environments and the culture of care throughout the organization.

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          Most cited references68

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          A continuity theory of normal aging.

          R Atchley (1989)
          Continuity Theory holds that, in making adaptive choices, middle-aged and older adults attempt to preserve and maintain existing internal and external structures; and they prefer to accomplish this objective by using strategies tied to their past experiences of themselves and their social world. Change is linked to the person's perceived past, producing continuity in inner psychological characteristics as well as in social behavior and in social circumstances. Continuity is thus a grand adaptive strategy that is promoted by both individual preference and social approval.
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            The relation between everyday activities and successful aging: a 6-year longitudinal study.

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            Activity has long been thought to be related to successful aging. This study was designed to examine longitudinally the relation between everyday activities and indicators of successful aging, namely well-being, function, and mortality. The study was based on the Aging in Manitoba Study, with activity being measured in 1990 and function, well-being, and mortality assessed in 1996. Well-being was measured in terms of life satisfaction and happiness; function was defined in terms of a composite measure combining physical and cognitive function. Regression analyses indicated that greater overall activity level was related to greater happiness, better function, and reduced mortality. Different activities were related to different outcome measures; but generally, social and productive activities were positively related to happiness, function, and mortality, whereas more solitary activities (e.g., hand-work hobbies) were related only to happiness. These findings highlight the importance of activity in successful aging. The results also suggest that different types of activities may have different benefits. Whereas social and productive activities may afford physical benefits, as reflected in better function and greater longevity, more solitary activities, such as reading, may have more psychological benefits by providing a sense of engagement with life.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Academic Editor
                Journal
                Geriatrics (Basel)
                Geriatrics (Basel)
                geriatrics
                Geriatrics
                MDPI
                2308-3417
                28 June 2016
                September 2016
                : 1
                : 3
                : 15
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Occupational Therapy Department, Mental Health Services, Cavan General Hospital, Lisdarn, Cavan H12 N889, Ireland
                [2 ]Discipline of Occupational Therapy, Trinity College, Saint James’s Hospital, James’s Street, Dublin D08 RT2X, Ireland; jbrangan@ 123456tcd.ie
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: Mark.Morgan-Brown@ 123456hotmail.com ; Tel.: +353-86-326-5065
                Article
                geriatrics-01-00015
                10.3390/geriatrics1030015
                6371104
                941cddab-6044-4c04-9d96-492f7baef513
                © 2016 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 05 April 2016
                : 22 June 2016
                Categories
                Article

                social engagement,interactive occupation,elderly,mental health,dementia,residents,staff,residential,nursing home,environment

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