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Niedderer, K., Coleston-Shields, D.M., Tournier, I., Craven, M., Gosling, J., Garde, J.A., Salter, B., Bosse, M., Griffoen, I., 2017.

Designing with and for People with Dementia: Developing a Mindful Interdisciplinary Co-Design Methodology

Output Type:Conference paper
Presented at:IASDR 2017, 7th International Conference
Publication:Proceedings of IASDR 2017
Venue:Cincinnati, USA
Publisher:International Association of Societies of Design Research
Dates:31/10/2017 - 3/11/2017
URL:scholar.uc.edu/collections/d504rk335?locale=en

This paper reports on the development of a mindful interdisciplinary design methodology in the
context of the MinD project research into designing for and with people with dementia, which
takes the particular focus on supporting the subjective well-being and self-empowerment of
people with early to mid stage dementia in social context.
Existing research is for the most part focussed on functional support and safe-keeping from the
perspective of the carer. References to decision-making and empowerment are predominantly
related to action planning for dementia care or advance care planning. References to care and
social interaction show that caregivers tend to take a deficit-oriented perspective, and
occupation of people with dementia is often associated with doing 'something' with little focus
on the meaningfulness of the activity. Furthermore, caregivers and people with dementia tend
to differ in their perspectives, e.g. on assistive devices, which might offer support.
The MinD project, has therefore developed an interdisciplinary co-design methodology in
which the voices to people with dementia contribute to better understanding and developing
mindful design solutions that support people with dementia with regard to their the subjective
well-being and self-empowerment a well as meaningful and equitable social engagement.
This paper discussed the design methodological framework and methods developed for the data
collection and design development phases of the project, and their rationale. It thus makes a
contribution to interdisciplinary methodologies in the area of design for health.