Approximately 44% of new residents of care facilities in Korea were diagnosed with dementia (Song, Park & Kim, 2013), and in Canada, about one-third of older adults younger than 80 who have been diagnosed with dementia live in long-term care facilities (Canadian Institute for Health Information, 2018). Due to the rapid increase of these figures in the future, continuing to provide assistance services and appropriate environment for residents with dementia could be challenging for both countries.
This longitudinal observational study aims to examine whether residents with dementia in long-term care facilities with variability in physical environment attributions in Vancouver (N=11), Canada and Seoul (N=9), South Korea had a distinction in their quality of life (QoL). Physical environmental assessment was conducted using the Therapeutic Environment Screening Survey for Nursing Homes (TESS-NH) (Sloane et al., 2002). QoL was assessed three times over one year using Dementia Care Mapping tool (DCM) (University of Bradford, 2010). The results of the study demonstrated that the residents with dementia living in an institutional large-scale setting showed statistically more withdrawn behavior and spent more time to be negative mood or affect compared to the ones in a small-scale setting. This study also found that the number of potential positive behaviors of residents in a small-scale setting was three times higher than that of residents in an institutional large-scale setting. When looking at the distinction between two countries in the behavior category with a large average time difference, the residents with dementia in Korea had shorter meal/dessert times compared to those in Canada. The study supports that the small-scale homelike environment is intensely associated with a therapeutic environment for older adults with dementia.