Co-creating a Virtual Reality Program for Older Adults with Dementia in Hospital
Lillian Hung, Lily Haopu Ren, W Ben Mortenson, Angelica Lim, Jim Mann, Lily Wong, Christine Wallsworth, Jennifer Boger

TL;DR
This paper explores how involving patients, families, and staff in co-designing a VR program improves dementia care for older adults in hospitals.
Contribution
It introduces the use of Appreciative Inquiry to co-create VR technology with diverse stakeholders in dementia care.
Findings
Co-creation with patient partners and caregivers led to a VR program that better meets real-world needs.
Tailored methods fostered meaningful participation and a sense of ownership among participants.
The approach challenged assumptions about dementia care and promoted positive team interactions.
Abstract
Virtual Reality (VR) is promising in improving the well-being of older adults with dementia in hospitals; however, traditional VR design and VR experience delivery to meet their diverse needs. Involving older adult patient partners, family caregivers, and staff in the co-design of gerontechnology is considered best practice, yet few researchers have adopted this inclusive approach. Appreciative Inquiry offers a collaborative framework to engage relevant users, leveraging their expertise and lived experiences for innovation. Our study aims to understand the contribution of Appreciative Inquiry in engaging multiple partners in co-creating a VR program for Older Adults with Dementia in hospitals. We co-created a VR program guided by Appreciative Inquiry principles, engaging patient partners, families, hospital staff and leaders. We adapted methods to facilitate meaningful participation,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAppreciative Inquiry and Organizational Change · Mental Health and Patient Involvement · Aging and Gerontology Research
