4.7 Article

The Human Need for Equilibrium: Qualitative Study on the Ingenuity, Technical Competency, and Changing Strategies of People With Dementia Seeking Health Information

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/35072

Keywords

dementia; health information behavior; action research; equilibrium; postdiagnostic experience; mobile phone

Funding

  1. US Admin for Community Living [90REGE0008]
  2. NSF [IIS-2045679]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [DGE 1840340]
  4. NIDILRR
  5. Department of Health and Human Services

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This study primarily investigated the information behaviors of people with dementia who have been living with the condition for several years and aimed to identify their motivations for changing their information behaviors over time. The results showed that individuals with dementia have various information needs and adopt different information behaviors to manage the disrupted aspects of their lives following a diagnosis of dementia. These information behaviors are adaptable to accommodate the changing circumstances of their condition and life.
Background: Prior research on health information behaviors of people with dementia has primarily focused on examining the types of information exchanged by people with dementia using various web-based platforms. A previous study investigated the information behaviors of people with dementia within a month of their diagnosis. There is an empirical gap in the literature regarding the evolution of health information needs and behaviors of people with dementia as their condition progresses. Objective: Our work primarily investigated the information behaviors of people with dementia who have been living with the condition for several (4 to 26) years. We also aimed to identify their motivations for changing their information behaviors over time. Our primary research questions were as follows: how do people with dementia get informed about their condition, and why do people with dementia seek information about their condition? Methods: We adopted an action research approach by including 2 people with dementia as members of our research team. Collaboratively, we conducted 16 remote 1-hour contextual inquiry sessions with people living with mild to moderate dementia. During the study sessions, the first 40 minutes included semistructured interviews with participants concerning their information behaviors, followed by a 20-minute demonstration of their information-seeking strategies. Data from these interviews were analyzed using a constructivist grounded theory approach. Results: Participants described their information needs in terms of managing the disrupted physiological, emotional, and social aspects of their lives following a diagnosis of dementia. They used various information behaviors, including active search, ongoing search, monitoring, proxy search, information avoidance, and selective exposure. These information behaviors were not stagnant; however, they were adapted to accommodate the changing circumstances of their dementia and their lives as they worked to re-establish equilibrium to continue to engage in life while living with a degenerative neurological condition. Conclusions: Our research revealed the motivations, changing abilities, and chosen strategies of people with dementia in their search for information as their condition evolves. This knowledge can be used to develop and improve person-centered information and support services for people with dementia so that they can more easily re-establish equilibrium and continue to engage in life.

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