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'Sand in the works?' Infrastructural affordances and life with dementia in the community.

Holly Symonds-BrownChristine CeciHarkeert Judge
Published in: Sociology of health & illness (2022)
The social health of people living with dementia is a more recent addition to the dementia research agenda; to date conceptions of the problem and solutions have relied on underdeveloped theorisations of sociality and social inclusion. In this article, using a material-semiotic approach to care practices and infrastructure, we use an ethnographic case study of one family of a person living with dementia using a day programme and home care supports over a period of 9 months, to examine how infrastructural arrangements provide particular affordances for social relatedness for people living with dementia in the community. The aim of the analysis is to consider how the infrastructural affordances created by the organisation of care may create spatially bounded lives and limit the subject positions available for people living with dementia and their families. It is these narrowed positions of dwelling that we argue may be the necessary starting place for thinking about the social health of people living with dementia and the solutions that might be helpful for them.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mild cognitive impairment
  • mental health
  • cognitive impairment
  • public health
  • palliative care
  • randomized controlled trial
  • study protocol
  • drinking water
  • social media
  • global health