Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

The domus philosophy: A comparative evaluation of a new approach to residential care for the demented elderly

65

Citations

10

References

1991

Year

Abstract

Abstract This study reports a cross‐sectional comparison between three continuing care facilities for severely disturbed elderly demented people: two mental hospital psychogeriatric wards and a unit run according to the domus philosophy of care. The domus was characterized by greater expectations for residents' functioning, policy choice, resident control and availability of social and recreational activities. The level of staffing was higher on the domus than on the two wards. The residents on the three settings were broadly comparable with regard to age, diagnosis, length of stay, objectively assessed cognitive impairment and depression, but the domus residents were rated by the staff as less disabled in self‐care tasks, orientation and communication. Direct non‐participant observation using the Short Observation Method demonstrated significantly higher levels of activities and staff‐resident interaction on the domus compared to the hospital wards. There were no differences between the settings with regard to staff absenteeism, job turnover or psychological impairment, but the domus staff expressed higher levels of job satisfaction. These findings are discussed in the context of the limitations of study design and method.

References

YearCitations

Page 1