Caregivers' Experiences With Involuntary Oral Care for Individuals With Dementia Within the Dutch Care and Coercion Act
Maud Jonker, Coos Engelsma, David J. Manton, Anita Visser

TL;DR
This study explores how caregivers in the Netherlands experience providing involuntary oral care to dementia patients under a new law.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into caregivers' experiences with a specific legal framework for involuntary oral care in dementia care.
Findings
The Care and Coercion Act increased awareness of involuntary oral care among caregivers.
Differences in interpreting legal definitions led to varied application of the law.
Some caregivers believe the law may lead to quicker discontinuation of oral care.
Abstract
Individuals with dementia frequently show care‐resistant behaviour toward the provision of oral care. Providing oral care despite care‐resistant behaviour is legally considered to be involuntary oral care. In the Netherlands, the provision of involuntary oral care to incapacitated individuals with dementia is regulated by the Care and Coercion Act (CCA) since 2020. This study aimed to assess how care providers experienced the CCA in the context of involuntary oral care for individuals with dementia. 32 one‐on‐one semi‐structured interviews were conducted with different care providers involved in oral care for incapacitated individuals with dementia. Through the interviews, multiple experiences concerning the CCA were identified. These experiences were related to: (1) awareness of involuntary care, (2) implementation of the law, (3) definitions, (4) circumvention of the law and (5)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints · Health, Medicine and Society · Migration, Identity, and Health
