December 2024
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13 Reads
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December 2024
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13 Reads
November 2024
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31 Reads
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1 Citation
Ageing and Society
Understanding how to improve the physical and cognitive accessibility of visitor economy businesses and organisations wanting to offer nature-based outdoor pursuits for people with dementia is key to supporting their inclusion and agency. The aim of this qualitative study was to understand the experiences, needs and preferences of people with dementia participating in nature-based outdoor pursuits in their leisure time. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 people with dementia and 15 family members and subjected to thematic analysis. Four themes related to inclusion for people with dementia and their family members reflected diversity in individual needs and preferences for engaging with nature-based outdoor pursuits, their own adaptations to maintain access including accommodating risk, how cognitive and physical accessibility can be supported by businesses, and which practical and psychosocial barriers prevent inclusion. Learning from people with dementia and their family members has helped bridge the gap to their inclusion in nature-based outdoor pursuits. Their insights will inform the development of such pursuits by businesses and organisations as well as future work into risk decision-making.
October 2024
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18 Reads
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8 Citations
Tourism Management
July 2024
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29 Reads
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3 Citations
Dementia
Purpose This article adopts an embodiment lens to explore the individual leisure experiences of people living with dementia when engaging in nature-based pursuits. It focuses on how people living with dementia frame their everyday experiences of nature and how these are shaped by any cognitive challenges and/or other comorbidities affecting physical health. Design/methodology/approach Taking a phenomenological research approach, we interviewed 15 people living with dementia and 15 family carers of people with dementia to explore how people with dementia engage with nature as a subjective leisure experience. We analysed their accounts using reflexive thematic analysis. Findings The findings reveal how people living with dementia frame their experiences of nature-based pursuits through three interlinked themes of ‘bodily feelings and emotions’, ‘sense of self and identity’ and ‘connectivity to others’. Originality/value The paper contributes to knowledge by examining through the lens of embodiment a neglected and overlooked dimension of everyday leisure: how nature is encountered, negotiated and enjoyed. The paper illustrates how nature and the outdoors may help people living with dementia to continue to enjoy prior leisure pursuits and thus achieve a degree of continuity in their everyday lives.
May 2024
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57 Reads
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2 Citations
Heliyon
December 2023
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39 Reads
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7 Citations
A values-based approach embedded in the transformative tourism research paradigm is used to examine dementia-friendly outdoor and nature-based experiences. Interview and site audits were conducted to explore the visitor economy-nature-well-being nexus. Using thematic analysis, researchers set out to understand how organizational change can improve the visitor journey through values and actions that create an accessible visitor experience for people suffering from dementia. The findings show that while the current practice of providing events and tailored sessions for the local community is a good start, further development is needed; this paper offers selected pathways to becoming a dementia-friendly business, including the importance of an organizational champion and an accessible site and a nature-based experience or event that appeals to a wide audience. Theoretically, this work operationalizes transformative tourism and provides a framework for future work.
July 2023
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148 Reads
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7 Citations
The health and well-being benefits of outdoor nature-based activity are increasingly recognised, but older people with cognitive impairment face significant barriers to access. The ENLIVEN project aims to promote access by gathering evidence and coproducing guidance for activity providers. As part of this project, we conducted a scoping review to characterise the types of outdoor nature-based activity for older people with dementia and other forms of cognitive impairment for which research evidence is available and the range of outcomes is examined. The protocol is available online. We systematically searched relevant databases from 1st January, 2009, to 20th October, 2022, and screened articles against the following criteria: participants were older people aged 65 and above with cognitive impairment arising from dementia or another health condition. The study described the formal provision of outdoor nature-based activity away from the person’s usual place of residence, and at least one outcome of participation in the activity was evaluated. Twenty-eight articles met inclusion criteria, all focused on people with dementia. In most cases, participants were attending day care or living in residential care, and sample sizes ranged from 4 to 136. Activities fell into three groups: green day care (fifteen articles), equine-assisted interventions (seven articles), and community nature-based activities (six articles). Outcome domains explored were connection with nature, activity engagement, impacts on clinical symptoms, functional ability, physical, psychological and social health,, and quality of life. Outdoor nature-based activity can be offered as an opportunity for meaningful occupation to enrich daily life, as a framework for day care provision, or as an intervention to address clinical needs. The evidence base for green day care is relatively established, but the potential for addressing specific clinical needs remains to be explored. The paucity of evidence regarding community provision, especially for those not attending formal care settings, suggests the need for effective knowledge exchange to stimulate initiatives in this area.
February 2023
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60 Reads
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1 Citation
The aims of the scoping review for which the protocol is presented here are: · To identify and characterise the types of outdoor nature-based activity for older people with dementia and other forms of cognitive impairment that have been the subject of research and for which research evidence is available. · To identify and describe the range of outcomes examined in the research studies on this topic.
December 2022
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1 Read
December 2022
... This study employed a narrative review to offer a comprehensive analysis and generate in-depth insights into multimodality in tourism and hospitality. The narrative review is appropriate given that the research topic is in a nascent yet rapidly evolving phase (Page & Connell, 2024). ...
October 2024
Tourism Management
... These efforts have laid a foundation for determining how dementia-friendly tourism destinations might be constructed. Aspects of interest include travel barriers, establishing a dementia-friendly visitor economy through business engagement, and other matters (see Page et al., 2015;Innes et al., 2016;Connell et al., 2017;Connell & Page, 2019a;2019b;Page et al., 2023;Owen et al., 2024;. These breakthrough studies have helped bring dementia into the tourism context. ...
July 2024
Dementia
... Thus, as the market for key personnel has grown more competitive, health institutions often find it valuable to keep older workers on the job rather than replace them with younger ones. Scholars (Connell et al., 2024) show that older workers represent a largely untapped opportunity as age is viewed as an advantage in organisations. It can therefore be noted that health sector organisations are beginning to focus on this talent pool as a competitive advantage. ...
May 2024
Heliyon
... Such experiences are designed to achieve both personal and societal transformation for travellers, local residents of tourism destinations and employees. Transformative services researchers seek to improve the life of target groups, including those with dementia (Page et al., 2023) or disabilities (Tao et al., 2025). ...
December 2023
... Zieris et al. (2023) have reported the positive impacts of birdwatching on cognitive resources, mobility and wellbeing, although again this study has methodological limitations and was with residents in nursing homes only. Collins et al. (2023) found that research evidence on leisure activities for older people with cognitive impairment focused on three main areas: green day care, equine-assisted interventions and community nature-based activities which included horticulture but also walking and urban woodland activity programmes. For example, Noone et al. (2017) have highlighted the importance of horticulture to promote physical and mental wellbeing, as well as social connectedness for people with dementia living in the community, with a community gardening project demonstrating the potential of such interventions to support agency and social citizenship (Noone and Jenkins, 2018). ...
July 2023
... For example, progress reports of age-friendly initiatives in the United States have been found to offer examples of multi-sector collaboration, often with public sector entities (Black et al., 2022a). Additionally, the gray literature on age-friendly efforts is often written by municipal employees or commissioned by public sector entities (Black et al., 2022b;Page & Connell, 2023). Notably, although both of these dimensions of involvement in AFCC work are reflected in the present framework, it is possible that gray literature could have enhanced the richness of our findings. ...
December 2022
... To date, mainstream leisure research has offered few theoretical advances in understanding the leisure-dementia nexus at a holistic level, with most studies of leisure activities unconnected with the wider leisure behaviour delivered or managed by the visitor economy. Yet the leisure literature on ageing (Page and Connell, 2022) indicates that in older age, a degree of continuity and change exists in people's leisure. From the existing dementia literature, we may posit that the condition acts as a disruptive, adaptive or constraining influence on the leisure time of those with dementia and their carers that occurs alongside previous leisure habits and behaviour. ...
February 2022
... The nature of Olympic and Paralympic Games can be comprehended as 'planned events', although researchers sometimes suggest different typologies exist (e.g. Getz 2005, Connell andPage 2015). Olympic and Paralympic Games are categorised as 'sports competitions' according to Getz (2005), whereas Connell and Page (2015) would call these 'hallmark events'. ...
March 2019
... These efforts have laid a foundation for determining how dementia-friendly tourism destinations might be constructed. Aspects of interest include travel barriers, establishing a dementia-friendly visitor economy through business engagement, and other matters (see Page et al., 2015;Innes et al., 2016;Connell et al., 2017;Connell & Page, 2019a;2019b;Page et al., 2023;Owen et al., 2024;. These breakthrough studies have helped bring dementia into the tourism context. ...
April 2019
Heliyon
... Current literature has primarily focused on the conceptualization and theorization of travel therapy, with relatively few studies examining how tourism providers implement such practices in real-world settings. While some exploratory cases have been documented, such as the development of dementia-friendly destinations (e.g., Connell and Page 2019;Page et al. 2015), systematic academic discourse on industry-led initiatives remains limited. ...
February 2019
Tourism Management