Coming to terms with a changing everyday life with dementia: What can we learn from people who are diagnosed while still working?

Louise Nygård, Ann-Charlotte Nedlund, Mervi Issakainen, Arlene Astell, Jennifer Boger, Anna Mäki-Petäjä-Leinonen, Ann-Louise Engvall, Birgit Heuchemer, Lena Rosenberg, Charlotta Ryd

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: The study’s aim was to better understand how persons, diagnosed with dementia while still working, strived to make sense of and come to terms with their changing everyday lives, i.e., practicing everyday citizenship, in the process of exiting work life.
Methods: The study has an explorative, longitudinal design, following five persons who developed dementia while still working, with repeated, qualitative, in-depth interviews. Comparative analyses were combined with an interpretative approach, using the concepts doing, being, becoming and belonging.
Results: Three overarching themes were created: i/Finding out an orientation to continued activity engagement, ii/ Relating to the diagnosis and available dementia specific activities, and iii/ Managing wellbeing and information related to health care. Findings illuminate how participants sought avenues for continued activity engagement in practicing everyday citizenship, based on their perceptions of what they were able to do, who they wanted to be and become, and where they felt they belonged.
Conclusion: The participants’ agency came strongly through in their efforts to come to terms with changes in everyday life in work and private lives, as well as with health care and dementia associations, underscoring that agency is vital and possible to support in persons with early-stage dementia.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-19
Number of pages20
JournalDementia -International Journal of Social Research
Early online date26 Feb 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 26 Feb 2025

Keywords

  • agency
  • citizenship
  • early onset dementia
  • management
  • self-perception
  • subjective experience

Cite this