# Measuring meaning-based well-being in individuals with dementia: the creation and validation of the well-being in dementia inventory

**Authors:** Zehra B Turel, Allan Perry, Alexander Balicki, Elizabeta Mukaetova-Ladinska, Estefania Vargas Triguero, Anna Lesniak, John Maltby

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afaf092 · Age and Ageing · 2025-04-16

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new tool to measure meaning-based well-being in people with dementia, validated across different care settings.

## Contribution

The study creates and validates the Well-being in Dementia Inventory (WiDI), a novel assessment tool for eudaimonic well-being in dementia patients.

## Key findings

- The WiDI has six reliable dimensions: Self-Sufficiency, Functional Mastery, Goal-Based Mastery, Purposeful Engagement, Positive Interactions, and Constructive Self-Perspective.
- The WiDI shows strong reliability and validity, with consistent results across age, gender, and care contexts.
- The tool correlates well with existing well-being measures, confirming its conceptual consistency.

## Abstract

Despite growing attention to well-being in dementia, few studies have defined meaning-based (eudaimonic) well-being in this population, mainly due to challenges posed by cognitive decline and self-report limitations. We developed and validated a novel tool for measuring meaning-based well-being in individuals with dementia, particularly those receiving residential or home care. The study included two samples: carers of 174 care home residents and carers of 420 community-dwelling individuals for whom respondents reported dementia. The Well-being in Dementia Inventory (WiDI) assesses six core dimensions: Self-Sufficiency, Functional Mastery, Goal-Based Mastery, Purposeful Engagement, Positive Interactions and Constructive Self-Perspective. Confirmatory Factor Analysis established the WiDI’s six-factor structure, underscoring its multidimensional nature and equivalence across community-dwelling individuals, regardless of gender, age group (younger-old/mid-older-old), or care context (family or professional). The scale exhibited high internal and inter-rater reliability, though very low scores in the care home sample inflated these statistics. Concurrent validity was confirmed through strong correlations with adapted indices of meaning-based well-being (e.g. the Scales of Psychological Well-being and the Mental Health Continuum Short Form, commonly used in non-dementia samples), indicating the WiDI’s conceptual consistency. These findings clarify how meaning-based well-being can be assessed in individuals with dementia and introduce the WiDI as a reliable and valid tool for assessing well-being, suggesting broad applicability across care settings. These results have important implications for practice and policy, advocating a meaning-based approach to well-being assessments that ensures holistic, personalised care by focusing on key indicators of life quality.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cognitive decline (MESH:D003072), Dementia (MESH:D003704)

## Full text

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12001781/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12001781