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Wandering Science: Theoretical and Empirical Foundations

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Wandering Science: Theoretical and Empirical Foundations Donna Algase, PhD, RN, FAAN. FGSA Josephine M. Sana Professor of Nursing University of Michigan School of Nursing – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wandering Science: Theoretical and Empirical Foundations


1
Wandering Science Theoretical and Empirical
Foundations
  • Donna Algase, PhD, RN, FAAN. FGSA
  • Josephine M. Sana Professor of Nursing
  • University of Michigan School of Nursing

2
Focus of Presentation
  • What is wandering?
  • Theoretical and operational approaches
  • What are the outcomes of wandering?
  • Empirical findings
  • What explains wandering?
  • Theoretical models and empirical evidence

3
Early Definitions
  • Aimless or purposeless walking
  • Increased amount of walking
  • Snyder et al., 1978
  • Monsour Robb, 1982

4
NANDA Definition
  • meandering, aimless, or repetitive locomotion
    that exposes a person to harm and frequently is
    incongruent with boundaries, limits, or
    obstacles.
  • NANDA, 1999

5
Locomotion as a Rhythm

Not walking Phase
MOTION
TIME
Walking Phase
CYCLE
6
Wandering as Spatial or Geographic Patterns
7
Dimensions of Wandering
  • Frequency
  • Pattern
  • Boundary transgressions
  • Navigational deficits
  • Temporal aspects

Pattern
Frequency
8
Proposed Standardized Definition
  • a syndrome of dementia-related locomotion
    behavior
  • having a frequent, repetitive,
    temporally-disordered, and/or spatially-disoriente
    d nature
  • that is manifested in lapping, random, and/or
    pacing patterns, some of which are
  • associated with eloping, eloping attempts, or
    getting lost unless accompanied.
  • Algase, Moore, Vande Weerd Gavin-Dreschnack,
    2006

9
Wandering Outcomes
  • Falls, fractures and injuries
  • Elopement
  • Victimization
  • Weight loss
  • Early institutionalization
  • Premature mortality
  • Higher caregiver burden

10
Need-Driven, Dementia-compromised Behavior (NDB)
Model (Algase, Beck, Kolanowski, et al., 1996)

Background Factors
Wandering
Proximal Factors
11
Background Factors
  • Neurocognitive factors
  • memory, attention, language, visual-spatial
    skills
  • circadian rhythm
  • motor ability
  • Health Status
  • Socio-Demographics
  • gender, occupation
  • personality, behavioral response to stress

12
Proximal Factors
  • Physiological need states
  • hunger, thirst, elimination, pain, fatigue
  • Affective states
  • depression, apathy, anxiety, euphoria,
    irritability
  • Physical environment
  • light, noise, temperature, humidity, complexity
    of design
  • Social environment
  • staff mix and stability, ambiance, social
    engagement, crowding

13
Tested Interventions
  • Subjective barriers
  • Walking, exercise and other activities
  • Specialized environments
  • Behavioral techniques
  • Music
  • Alarms

14
Subjective Barriers
  • Includes camouflage, visual barriers, and floor
    grids
  • Capitalizes on visual-spatial distortions,
    agnosia
  • Quality of evidence varies
  • Effective in some cases, severely impaired, AD
    only?
  • Tested in residential facilities only

15
Exercise, Walking Activities
  • Some benefits reported, but studies too flawed to
    draw valid inferences
  • Insufficient description of targeted population
  • Tested in residential facilities only

16
Specialized Environments
  • Types of environments varies secured wards and
    nature/homelike areas
  • Outcomes differed by type of environment
  • Studies lacked theoretical underpinning to
    explain success
  • Examined in residential facilities only

17
Behavioral Interventions
  • Compelling results for reducing unwanted
    wandering
  • Ideal reinforcement schedules unknown
  • Consistency of approach may be unfeasible to
    implement with low staff to patient ratios
  • Worth further evaluation, esp. in community/home
    contexts for specific wandering behaviors

18
Alarms
  • Used to deter exit attempts
  • Effective for reducing attempts
  • Verbal versus aversive alarms have greater appeal
  • May have applicability in home settings,
    especially as technology advances

19
Complementary/Alternative Therapies
  • Hand/foot massage have been tested acupuncture
    testing in progress
  • Massage effective in the short run for agitation
    impact on wandering unknown

20
Pattern as a Basis for Intervention Random
Wandering
  • To interrupt/stop active random wandering
  • To reduce or prevent active random wandering
  • Distraction
  • Social engagement
  • Small group or 11 activity
  • Calm, but engaging milieu

21
Pattern as a Basis for InterventionLapping
  • To interrupt/stop active lapping
  • To reduce or prevent lapping
  • -
  • Redirection
  • Frequent rest periods
  • Other, more comfortable repetitious activity

22
Pattern as a Basis for InterventionPacing
  • To interrupt/stop pacing
  • To reduce or prevent pacing
  • Address underlying concern, not behavior
  • Stress reduction techniques
  • Reassurance, trust-building
  • Anticipate needs reduce eliminate known concerns

23
Trial and Error
  • Individualized approach based on behavior log
  • Context analysis
  • Eliminate cause/precipitant

24
General Goals for Treatment and Intervention
  • Assuring safety
  • Using preserved skills
  • Supporting abilities
  • Enabling functional navigation
  • Maximizing comfort and ease
  • Minimizing restriction

25
Assuring Safety
  • Enroll in Safe Return
  • Deter elopement
  • Enhance lighting
  • Remove hazards from the environment
  • Provide a balance/rhythm in the level and timing
    of stimulation

26
Using Preserved Skills
  • Encourage the person to do what they are able to
    do
  • Provide progressive support matched to ability
    remind, guide, assist, do for
  • Provide orientation through cuing, signage,
    landmarks

27
Supporting Abilities
  • Ensure adequate hydration and nutrition
  • Prevent exhaustion
  • Support circadian rhythm
  • Preserve skin integrity
  • Monitor effects of prescribed medications

28
Comforting
  • Establish a working way to communicate
  • Build trust
  • Engage the person in meaningful, structured,
    supervised activity that provides sensory
    stimulation
  • Create regular opportunity for 11 communication
    at the persons level of comprehension
  • Preserve elements of previous meaningful life
    activities
  • Create environments that are engaging, but not
    over-stimulating

29
Navigating
  • Provide redundant cueing
  • Decorate with relevant personal items and photo
    identification
  • Keep desired areas in view obscure line of
    vision to undesirable locations
  • Display orienting information in multiple
    prominent places
  • Use rooms for a single clear purpose

30
Minimizing Restrictions
  • Provide for flexibility within a larger structure
  • Simplify challenges
  • Lower performance expectations
  • Reserve chemical and physical restraint as a
    last, if ever, resort

31
Suggested Practice Standards
  • Establish a clear goal for intervening
  • Use empirically-based interventions with caution
  • Balance safety and autonomy
  • Aim interventions to modify wandering only when
    it is problematic for the wanderer
  • Be systematic in targeting known or suspected
    causes of an individuals wandering
  • Individualize strategies using case-study
    methodology
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