Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Intergroup and intercultural perspectives on communication and living with dementia

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Tony Young, Dr Alina SchartnerORCiD, Dr Ellen Tullo

Downloads

Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.


Abstract

Dementia is a worldwide epidemic with profound implications for societies and individuals. Person-centred communication (PCC) has been advocated as a contributor to improving care over recent years, particularly in the care of people living with dementia (PLWD), and particularly in the ‘west’. This international study investigated the hitherto unexplored views of medical students regarding the applicability of a PCC model – the Dementia Model of Effective Communication - to the care of PLWD. Our specific aim was to provide internationally and transculturally relevant information comparing the views of undergraduates in different year groups, and in two culturally-contrastive national locations. Students in the UK and Malaysia (N = 531), following the same undergraduate medical education curriculum, completed a Dementia Communication Questionnaire: subgroups of students then took part in focus groups (N = 21) or in individual interviews (N = 10) in each location. Findings indicated a general acceptance, across the year groups and locations, of the appropriateness and effectiveness of most aspects of a PCC approach, but also highlighted awareness of some of the challenges of applying this approach to real-life, real-time care. Complexities were identified by students regarding certain issues, including the acceptability of deception and the value and ethics of speaking to family members first. Some differences emerged between participants in the two locations about these two issues, as well as on appropriate terminology to designate PLWD. Findings, while generally supportive of the transcultural applicability and relevance of a PCC model, also point up some of the possible difficulties of its application in different cultural environments. We discuss possible reasons for medical students’ uncertainties, and some implications of these findings for intercultural theory, medical education and for care practice.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Young TJ, Schartner A, Tullo E

Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)

Publication status: Published

Conference Name: British Association for Applied Linguistics Intercultural Communication SIG Annual Seminar

Year of Conference: 2016

Print publication date: 26/05/2016

Acceptance date: 07/04/2016


Share