A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology

Background Technology is becoming a popular and cost-effective way of supporting people living with dementia. Despite this, uptake and adherence to technology interventions is variable. Two factors contributing to this are people's pre-existing attitudes towards technology which influence how a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Annabel Ditton, Shirley Evans, Christopher Fox, Jane Cross
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-06-01
Series:Digital Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076251351538
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849429447361429504
author Annabel Ditton
Shirley Evans
Christopher Fox
Jane Cross
author_facet Annabel Ditton
Shirley Evans
Christopher Fox
Jane Cross
author_sort Annabel Ditton
collection DOAJ
description Background Technology is becoming a popular and cost-effective way of supporting people living with dementia. Despite this, uptake and adherence to technology interventions is variable. Two factors contributing to this are people's pre-existing attitudes towards technology which influence how accepted interventions are, and how accessible technologies are to use. Attitudes and accessibility are developed through people's everyday experiences of technology which are underexplored in research. Method This study used photo-elicitation interviews to explore ten people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology and dementia-specific technology. Experiences were explored in and outside the home environment to understand experience at an individual and societal level. Reflexive thematic analysis was used to understand how technologies are experienced, and how these experiences might contribute to the acceptability and accessibility of technologies supporting people living with dementia. Findings Four overarching findings were formed from the data: 1) Impact of symptoms of dementia on technology use, 2) Motivation to use technology, 3) The importance of integrating appropriate technology, and 4) The importance of setting in technology implementation. Conclusions These findings demonstrate that technologies are a desirable method of providing support to many people living with dementia if the correct tailoring and support is given. People living with dementia are motivated to use technology for various reasons, but interventions that enhance existing face-to-face services, rather than replace them maybe more accepted. Finally, people living with dementia are hopeful that technology will help future generations because these individuals will begin their dementia journey already equipped with the confidence and skills to manage more complex technologies effectively.
format Article
id doaj-art-c4b49411528f439b9d7d7de364705ea1
institution Kabale University
issn 2055-2076
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series Digital Health
spelling doaj-art-c4b49411528f439b9d7d7de364705ea12025-08-20T03:28:21ZengSAGE PublishingDigital Health2055-20762025-06-011110.1177/20552076251351538A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technologyAnnabel Ditton0Shirley Evans1Christopher Fox2Jane Cross3 Exeter, UK Exeter, UK Background Technology is becoming a popular and cost-effective way of supporting people living with dementia. Despite this, uptake and adherence to technology interventions is variable. Two factors contributing to this are people's pre-existing attitudes towards technology which influence how accepted interventions are, and how accessible technologies are to use. Attitudes and accessibility are developed through people's everyday experiences of technology which are underexplored in research. Method This study used photo-elicitation interviews to explore ten people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology and dementia-specific technology. Experiences were explored in and outside the home environment to understand experience at an individual and societal level. Reflexive thematic analysis was used to understand how technologies are experienced, and how these experiences might contribute to the acceptability and accessibility of technologies supporting people living with dementia. Findings Four overarching findings were formed from the data: 1) Impact of symptoms of dementia on technology use, 2) Motivation to use technology, 3) The importance of integrating appropriate technology, and 4) The importance of setting in technology implementation. Conclusions These findings demonstrate that technologies are a desirable method of providing support to many people living with dementia if the correct tailoring and support is given. People living with dementia are motivated to use technology for various reasons, but interventions that enhance existing face-to-face services, rather than replace them maybe more accepted. Finally, people living with dementia are hopeful that technology will help future generations because these individuals will begin their dementia journey already equipped with the confidence and skills to manage more complex technologies effectively.https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076251351538
spellingShingle Annabel Ditton
Shirley Evans
Christopher Fox
Jane Cross
A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology
Digital Health
title A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology
title_full A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology
title_fullStr A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology
title_short A qualitative exploration of people living with dementia's experiences of using everyday technology
title_sort qualitative exploration of people living with dementia s experiences of using everyday technology
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076251351538
work_keys_str_mv AT annabelditton aqualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT shirleyevans aqualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT christopherfox aqualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT janecross aqualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT annabelditton qualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT shirleyevans qualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT christopherfox qualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology
AT janecross qualitativeexplorationofpeoplelivingwithdementiasexperiencesofusingeverydaytechnology