We examine the concept of personhood in relation to people living with dementia and implications for the humanity of care, drawing on a body of ethnographic work. Much debate has searched for an adequate account of the person for these purposes. Broad contrasts can be made between accounts focusing on cognition and mental faculties, and accounts focusing on embodied and relational aspects of the person. Some have suggested the concept of the person is critical for good care; others suggest the vexed debates mean that the concept should be abandoned. We argue instead that the competing accounts illuminate the very tensions in personhood which are manifest for all of us, but especially for people living with dementia, and argue that our accou...
This paper draws on two data sources (Kelly's ethnographic study and a British Broadcasting Corporat...
The growing number of people living with dementia presents a worldwide challenge for society and for...
Introduction: Societal discourses of dementia are medicalised and dehumanising. This leads to a soci...
It has become commonly expected that the “personhood” of people with dementia should be recognised, ...
Over the space of a few decades, biomedical advances have blurred the line between life and death an...
Since John Locke, regnant conceptions of personhood in Western philosophy have focused onindividual ...
This paper demonstrates how the use of narrative inquiry and personhood underpins our approach to p...
My interest in studying neurodegenerative models of illness lies primarily in the need to define hu...
Person-centred approaches in dementia, based on the concept of personhood, have undoubtedly provided...
Perceptions and definitions of dementia vary depending on the sociocultural context. In the United S...
What is personhood and how can it be maintained in someone with dementia? Commenting on a case study...
Person-centred care is often cited as an aim of gerontological nursing and promotion of personhood i...
This thesis examines the phenomenological aspects of dementia patients who are living out their live...
As a corrective to the depersonalizing tendencies of some caregiving practices and treatment context...
The term 'person-centred care' is used widely within mental health and healthcare fields and is part...
This paper draws on two data sources (Kelly's ethnographic study and a British Broadcasting Corporat...
The growing number of people living with dementia presents a worldwide challenge for society and for...
Introduction: Societal discourses of dementia are medicalised and dehumanising. This leads to a soci...
It has become commonly expected that the “personhood” of people with dementia should be recognised, ...
Over the space of a few decades, biomedical advances have blurred the line between life and death an...
Since John Locke, regnant conceptions of personhood in Western philosophy have focused onindividual ...
This paper demonstrates how the use of narrative inquiry and personhood underpins our approach to p...
My interest in studying neurodegenerative models of illness lies primarily in the need to define hu...
Person-centred approaches in dementia, based on the concept of personhood, have undoubtedly provided...
Perceptions and definitions of dementia vary depending on the sociocultural context. In the United S...
What is personhood and how can it be maintained in someone with dementia? Commenting on a case study...
Person-centred care is often cited as an aim of gerontological nursing and promotion of personhood i...
This thesis examines the phenomenological aspects of dementia patients who are living out their live...
As a corrective to the depersonalizing tendencies of some caregiving practices and treatment context...
The term 'person-centred care' is used widely within mental health and healthcare fields and is part...
This paper draws on two data sources (Kelly's ethnographic study and a British Broadcasting Corporat...
The growing number of people living with dementia presents a worldwide challenge for society and for...
Introduction: Societal discourses of dementia are medicalised and dehumanising. This leads to a soci...