Abstract :
Dementia is one of the greatest contemporary health and social care challenges,
and novel approaches to the care of its sufferers are needed. New information and
communication technologies (ICT) have the potential to assist those caring for
people with dementia, through access to networked information and support,
tracking and surveillance. This article reports the views about such new technologies
of 34 carers of people with dementia. We also held a group discussion
with nine carers for respondent validation. The carers’ actual use of new ICT was
limited, although they thought a gradual increase in the use of networked technology
in dementia care was inevitable but would bypass some carers who saw
themselves as too old. Carers expressed a general enthusiasm for the benefits of
ICT, but usually not for themselves, and they identified several key challenges
including: establishing an appropriate balance between, on the one hand, privacy
and autonomy and, on the other : maximising safety ; establishing responsibility
for and ownership of the equipment and who bears the costs ; the possibility that
technological help would mean a loss of valued personal contact ; and the possibility
that technology would substitute for existing services rather than be complementary.
For carers and dementia sufferers to be supported, the expanding use
of these technologies should be accompanied by intensive debate of the associated
issues
Keywords :
JOHN POWELL , Qualitative methods , Dementia , Carers , Information technology