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Multisensory environments for leisure: promoting well-being in nursing home residents with dementia

journal contribution
posted on 2004-02-01, 00:00 authored by Helen CoxHelen Cox, I Burns, Sally Savage
Multisensory environments such as Snoezelen® rooms are becoming increasingly popular in health care facilities for older individuals. There is limited reliable evidence of the benefits of such innovations, and the effect they have on residents, caregivers, and visitors in these facilities. This two-stage project examined how effective two types of multisensory environments were in improving the well-being of older individuals with dementia. The two multisensory environments were a Snoezelen room and a landscaped garden. These environments were compared to the experience of the normal living environment. The observed response of 24 residents with dementia in a nursing home was measured during time spent in the Snoezelen room, in the garden, and in the living room. In the second part of the project, face-to-face interviews were conducted with six caregivers and six visitors to obtain their responses to the multisensory environments. These interviews identified the components of the environments most used and enjoyed by residents and the ways in which they could be improved to maximize well-being.

History

Journal

Journal of gerontological nursing

Volume

30

Issue

2

Pagination

37 - 45

Publisher

Slack Inc

Location

Thorofare, N. J.

ISSN

0098-9134

eISSN

1938-243X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Slack Inc

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