Development of a Staff Informant Measure of Lucidity
Author(s) -
Jeanne A. Teresi,
José A. Luchsinger,
Mildred Ramírez,
Stephanie Silver,
Davangere P. Devanand,
Julie Ellis,
Gabriel Boratgis,
Paloma Gonzalez-Lopez
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
innovation in aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2399-5300
DOI - 10.1093/geroni/igab046.180
Subject(s) - psychology , thematic analysis , meaning (existential) , event (particle physics) , content (measure theory) , measure (data warehouse) , content analysis , qualitative research , social psychology , psychotherapist , computer science , sociology , mathematical analysis , social science , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , database
Lucidity Measure Development: An existing questionnaire measuring lucidity length, degree, content, coinciding circumstances, and time from lucid episode to death was expanded to include time of day, expressive and receptive communication and speech the month prior to and during the lucid event. Pilot Study: 33 interviews with staff were conducted; 73% reported ever witnessing paradoxical lucidity. Among 29 events reported, 31% lasted several days, 20.7%, 1 day, and 24.1% less. In 78.6% the patient engaged in unexpected activity. 20% died within 3 days and 17% within 3 months after the event. Qualitative Analyses: To refine the measure, 10 family caregivers and 20 LTSS staff caregivers completed a web-based focus-group type exercise using QualtricsXM. A content-thematic analysis with an inductive approach was applied to make qualitative inferences by analyzing the meaning and semantic relationship of words, phrases, and concepts. Using the reduction method of selection, conceptual content categories will be developed.
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