Experience with Support at Workplaces for People with Young Onset Dementia: A Qualitative Evaluation of Being Open about Dementia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Ethics
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Confusion in the Workplace Stemming from the Uncertainty of the Disease
“His writing has become poor. He can’t do the work he could always do before. Small tasks take time. He talks less, and only in old stories or things he is good at he talks well. He also can’t recall the names of members at the workplace. He can’t remember new things, so everyone was worried that he might have dementia, so everyone came to discuss with me.”(Case D)
“He told me something like that, if he only says a little bit, people will surely say various things about what is or isn’t there, and because of that, he didn’t want to say it to too many people.”(Case B)
3.2. Sensitivity when Recommending Consultation and Diagnosis
“The person herself also apparently felt worried about something for a long time, so she said, ‘then I would go to see the doctor’. Then the person herself said, ‘if I go, I want to go here,’ and when I said, ‘do you want to go with your husband?’ she said, ‘I want you to come together with me’ so I went together with her for examination.”(Case E)
3.3. Creating a System That Considers Safety and Security
“The way we are currently working in the field is that we have organized that we are always working with someone. The partner who pairs with has already become the person in charge, and I have already told everyone about the person in charge. In such a situation, we are proceeding in the form of ‘I want you to work together. While covering each other’.”(Case I)
“As for employment, of course, we employed him as a regular employee at first, but the person himself says that it ultimately is overwhelming and tiring, so partway through, we reduced the hours a bit and made it a bit like a contract worker.”(Case F)
“It’s also tentatively the corporate culture to do while always communicating with the person himself/herself. In such circumstances, since T himself/herself and the person himself were actually diagnosed with dementia, it is not bad implications for the person himself, but of course, while having him understand the risks, the company wanted him to work a little bit while taking a back-up system in this way as a company, and we are proceeding after obtaining approval.”(Case I)
“We really want the person herself to work comfortably after all, and it is unthinkable at all to make what was her pride for 5, 10 years, what she had for herself like nothing.”(Case A)
3.4. Building Consensus between the Workplace, Employees with YOD, and Their Families
“What we want to know as the business facility side may be different from what the person himself or his family wants to know, and hearing what the person himself and his family may have heard, there may be cases that it may not match what the business facility wants to know.”(Case F)
“After we had his family come, he was in the workplace there for one or two months, but after that, it was decided that we would have him come to the general affairs department, do the work that he could do at the general affairs department.”(Case B)
3.5. Supporting the Person with Activities of Daily Living
“I was asked, “what kind of system does the company have?”, and I provided specifics, like, there’s this long leave period and so on, and this much disability allowance, and then the person himself went home, discussed with his family, and went on leave.”(Case B)
“After the illness was discovered, we continued to employ him as is until the handbook was issued and pension was confirmed, and we have decided that, after pension was fixed, we would change his employment status according to the person himself’s [sic] status.”(Case F)
4. Discussion
4.1. Being Open about Dementia
4.2. Workplace Accommodations
“The purpose of the present Convention is to promote, protect, and ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by all persons with disabilities and to promote respect for their inherent dignity. Persons with disabilities include those who have long-term physical, mental, intellectual, or sensory impairments which in interaction with various barriers may hinder their full and effective participation in society on an equal basis with others.”
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant Number (n = 10) | Industry | Research Participant | Case | Number of Employees in Industry | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Age | Sex | Diagnosis Present/Absent | ||||
A | Health and sanitation | Director of facility, in charge of personnel | 60s | Female | Present | 124 |
B | Manufacturing | Industrial nurse | 60s | Male | Present | 520 |
C | Manufacturing | Industrial nurse | 50s | Female | Present | 520 |
D | Transport and transportation | Industrial nurse | 60s | Male | Present | 100 |
E | Education and research | Director of facility | 60s | Female | Present | 30 |
F | Health and sanitation | Director of facility | 50s | Male | Present | 53 |
G | Health and sanitation | Department chief | 50s | Male | Present | 69 |
H | Temporary staffing | Department chief | 50s | Male | Present | 200 |
I | Temporary staffing | Department chief | 60s | Male | Present | 40 |
J | Sales | Department chief | 40s | Male | Present | 20 |
Category | Subcategory | Code |
---|---|---|
Confusion in the workplace stemming from the uncertainty of the disease | Uncertainty of how to relate to employee with YOD | Paused to think when the progress of work is different from before, but work is done |
Unsure of whether to tell employee of forgetfulness | ||
If co-workers are only told of symptoms, they can only surmise what the disease is | Colleagues guess illness due to changes in the employee’s behavior | |
Employee does not want incorrect information about them spread | ||
Co-workers can see that the employee is having difficulties at work | ||
Sensitivity when recommending consultation and diagnosis | Look for opportunities to recommend medical examinations | Use examples of work mistakes as an opportunity to recommend medical consultation |
The person himself/herself hesitates to undergo a medical examination | ||
Recommend medical examination since the earlier, the better if treatment is needed | ||
Go with the employee to visit the hospital and give support after the visit | If an employee visits the hospital alone, the workplace may not understand the diagnosis and treatment well | |
Nurse accompanies the employee to their medical examination at his/her request | ||
Diagnosis is an opportunity to think together about work options | Employer understands that the employee cannot work as usual after seeing medical certificate | |
After the diagnosis, the employee’s family is convinced that the person himself/herself cannot work as usual | ||
Creating a system that considers safety and security | Avoid risk by watching attentively | Enlist a co-worker who can take responsibility and assist |
Change work when it becomes difficult to do the work as instructed | ||
Judge work by looking at whether there are any hazards | ||
Manager regularly meets with the occupational doctor to confirm the employee’s condition | ||
Workplaces support employees wherever possible | Support employees until they decide that they can no longer work | |
At all times, the staff reports on the status to the manager | ||
Management wants the employee to continue working but thinks it is a burden on other employees | ||
With the employee’s consent, disclose dementia to colleagues | Decide on the scope of public disclosure of illness with the consent of the person himself/herself | |
Wait until employee is ready to disclose dementia to co-workers | ||
Consider a work setting where the person with young-onset dementia can make the most of his or her strengths | Confirm with the employee when planning | |
Assign a job that the person is good at | ||
The company respects employee’s pride in their work and experience | ||
Avoid new tasks that need to be remembered | Have employees take charge of the same work as before | |
Request work on a fixed schedule | ||
Building consensus among workplace, person with young-onset dementia, and their family | Schedule a meeting | With the employee’s consent, family members are invited to come to the workplace |
Confirm extent of family’s understanding of employee’s condition | ||
Confirm how family is accepting illness | ||
Consider department transfer | Difficult to convey transfer due to declining ability | |
Change work location after meeting with family | ||
Supporting continued living in the future | Recommendation for an internal system that can be used until retirement | Explain leave period and accident and sickness benefits |
Suggesting the pension applications that will be required after retirement | Propose application for disability pension | |
Connect with community social workers |
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Share and Cite
Omote, S.; Ikeuchi, S.; Okamoto, R.; Takahashi, Y.; Koyama, Y. Experience with Support at Workplaces for People with Young Onset Dementia: A Qualitative Evaluation of Being Open about Dementia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 6235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20136235
Omote S, Ikeuchi S, Okamoto R, Takahashi Y, Koyama Y. Experience with Support at Workplaces for People with Young Onset Dementia: A Qualitative Evaluation of Being Open about Dementia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(13):6235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20136235
Chicago/Turabian StyleOmote, Shizuko, Satomi Ikeuchi, Rie Okamoto, Yutaro Takahashi, and Yoshiko Koyama. 2023. "Experience with Support at Workplaces for People with Young Onset Dementia: A Qualitative Evaluation of Being Open about Dementia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 13: 6235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20136235
APA StyleOmote, S., Ikeuchi, S., Okamoto, R., Takahashi, Y., & Koyama, Y. (2023). Experience with Support at Workplaces for People with Young Onset Dementia: A Qualitative Evaluation of Being Open about Dementia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(13), 6235. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20136235