1 / 18

‘Assistive Technology in Extra Care Housing for People with Dementia’

‘Assistive Technology in Extra Care Housing for People with Dementia’. Eileen Askham - Director of Care Services Fold Housing Association N.I. and Fold Housing Association Ireland. FOLD SERVICES. SHELTERED HOUSING GENERAL NEEDS HOUSING ‘SPECIAL NEEDS’ HOUSING e.g. Dementia

Download Presentation

‘Assistive Technology in Extra Care Housing for People with Dementia’

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ‘Assistive Technology in Extra Care Housing for People with Dementia’ Eileen Askham - Director of Care Services Fold Housing Association N.I. and Fold Housing Association Ireland

  2. FOLD SERVICES • SHELTERED HOUSING • GENERAL NEEDS HOUSING • ‘SPECIAL NEEDS’ HOUSING e.g. Dementia Young Teenage Pregnancies Irish Travellers’ Families Homeless Families Physical Disability After Care Leavers etc. • SUPPORTED HOUSING (Learning Disabilities) • A ‘STAYING PUT’ SERVICE • TELECARE (& Community Alarm Service) • DAY CARE SERVICES Learning Disabilities Frail Elderly / Dementia

  3. ‘Assistive Technology in Extra Care Housing for People with Dementia’ • Key Objectives • Key Questions • Technology In Use • Practical Examples • Benefits Of Technology In Dementia Care

  4. ‘SEVEN OAKS’Supported Housing and Day Care CentreLondonderry

  5. ‘SEVEN OAKS’Provides Accommodation For: • 14 people with mild dementia • 10 people with moderate dementia • 6 people with severe dementia • 5 bungalows for couples • 20 daily day care places • Domiciliary Care (by Alzheimer’s Society) • Offices for Health & Social Services

  6. Key Objectives • Maximise the quality of life for those suffering from dementia by providing customised care solutions. • Maximise the efficiency and economy of the use of staff resources. • Assist in managing risk for clients and staff. • Enable the move from task orientation of staff to a greaterrelationship orientation.

  7. Key Questions • Does the use of technology reduce risk? • Does the use of technology reduce interpersonal contact? • Does the use of technology support care planning? • Does the technology affect the social well-being of residents? • Does it affect their physical well-being

  8. Technology in Use • Wandering Protection • Door opening detectors • Smoke detectors • Flood detectors • Fall detectors • Cooker/heat detectors etc • Bed occupancy detector • Automatic light controls ·

  9. Practical Examples

  10. Practical Examples

  11. Practical Examples

  12. Practical Examples

  13. Practical Examples

  14. Practical Examples

  15. What Benefits or Assistance Does Technology Really Offer? 10 Key Benefits

  16. Key Benefits • It supports the development of less intrusive practice • Risks to resident can be reduced • Some risks can be pre-empted • Staff can work more confidently • Staff can focus on quality interventions

  17. Key Benefits • Informs care planning enabling person centred approach • Reassures relatives • Challenges assumptions made about people with dementia • Supports the delivery of quality services • Drives creativity and innovation

  18. ‘Assistive Technology in Extra Care Housing for people with Dementia’ Does it bring genuine benefits? YES - providing ….the care philosophy drives technology ….the technology does not drive the care philosophy

More Related