# “The Window of Opportunity”: A Qualitative Exploration of Individual Reminiscence in Care Home Settings

**Authors:** Aoife Conway, Rosemary Bradley, Assumpta Ryan, Claire McCauley, Brighide Lynch, Deirdre Harkin, Sarah Penney

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare14020276 · 2026-01-21

## TL;DR

This study explores how individual reminiscence is used in care homes to support residents' wellbeing and identity, highlighting both benefits and challenges faced by staff.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the implementation of individualized reminiscence in care homes, focusing on staff experiences and contextual challenges.

## Key findings

- Staff perceived benefits for residents, including improved mood and engagement.
- Challenges included workload pressures and variability in family involvement.
- Individual reminiscence was linked to increased staff confidence and stronger staff–resident relationships.

## Abstract

Background: Care homes are complex care environments where supporting residents’ identity, wellbeing, and sense of personhood is central to person-centred care. Reminiscence is widely recognised as a psychosocial approach that can support these outcomes. However, existing evidence has largely focused on group-based interventions, with comparatively limited attention given to how individual reminiscence is implemented and sustained within care home practice. Methods: This study was an implementation-focused qualitative exploration of staff experiences of introducing and embedding individualised reminiscence in care home practice. Care home staff participated in four monthly workshops that introduced principles of individualised reminiscence and supported them to plan and implement reminiscence with at least one resident. Participants used either the InspireD digital reminiscence app (n = 19) or non-digital approaches such as life story books (n = 2), depending on local preferences and perceived suitability. Three focus groups were conducted with 21 care home staff to explore experiences of implementing individualised reminiscence and perceptions of its impact on residents, staff, and families. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Results: Four interrelated themes were identified: (1) reminiscence within pressured systems; (2) resident experience and identity; (3) adapting and sustaining practice; and (4) families as partners in reminiscence. Participants described challenges associated with workload pressures, role expectations, and variability in family involvement, which influenced how reminiscence was adopted in practice. Despite these constraints, participants described perceived benefits for residents, including perceived improvements in mood, engagement, and expressions of identity. Participants also discussed perceived increased staff confidence, strengthened staff–resident relationships, and enhanced awareness of person-centred care practices. Conclusions: Findings highlight the perceived potential of individualised reminiscence to support person-centred and relational care in care homes, while identifying key contextual influences on implementation. Further research is needed to examine sustainability and effectiveness using comparative and mixed-method designs.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12840592