Loading...
Developing culturally appropriate dementia interventions for people from culturally diverse backgrounds
Authors
Other contributors
Affiliation
Epub Date
Issue Date
2024-07-22
Submitted date
Alternative
Abstract
This chapter provides an overview of the current range of strategies used to implement culturally appropriate interventions to address dementia disparities faced by the culturally diverse populations. In doing so, five principles of cultural tailoring/adaptation are presented and used to guide an umbrella review to synthesise evidence from five existing systematic reviews. This chapter begins by presenting evidence of dementia in the culturally diverse populations in the UK and goes on to describe the terminologies related to cultural adaptation. A discussion of the five principles guiding cultural adaptation of inter Documentation of development and implementation process) forms the third part in this chapter. In the fourth part, the ‘state of the art’ of culturally appropriate interventions in dementia for people with culturally diverse backgrounds in Western countries is presented and discussed. The final part is a discussion of the gaps in the literature on culturally appropriate interventions for dementia and ends with recommendations.
Citation
Lim, J.N.W. (2024) Developing culturally appropriate dementia interventions for people from culturally diverse backgrounds, in Niedderer, K., Ludden, G., Dening, T, Holthoff-Detto, V. (eds.) Design for Dementia, Mental Health and Wellbeing: Co-Design, Interventions and Policy. London: Routledge, pp. 285-303.
Publisher
Journal
Research Unit
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Embedded videos
Additional Links
Type
Chapter in book
Language
en
Description
This is an author's accepted manuscript of a chapter published by Routledge in Design for Dementia, Mental Health and Wellbeing: Co-Design, Interventions and Policy, edited by Kristina Niedderer, Geke Ludden, Tom Dening & Vjera Holthoff-Detto, available online: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003318262 The accepted manuscript may differ from the final published version.
Series/Report no.
ISSN
EISSN
ISBN
9781003318262