Growing older with lifelong disability: What is quality of life in the middle years?

Date

2020

Authors

Tait, Kathleen
Hussain, Rafat
Wark, Stuart
Fung, Francis

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Inc.

Abstract

1.1 Background This study investigated perceived quality of life (QoL) of community‐dwelling middle‐aged adults (30-50 years) with an intellectual disability and/or developmental disability living in rural or urban areas in New South Wales and Queensland, Australia. The specific aim of the current paper was to provide a descriptive evidence base of QoL and its specific domains by various key demographic characteristics of middle‐aged individuals. This cohort is likely to have either experienced or reached adulthood during and after large‐scale deinstitutionalisation in Australia. 1.2 Methods and procedures A cross‐sectional design was utilised, based on the QoL‐Q survey, testing domains of satisfaction; Competence/Productivity; Empowerment/Independence; and social belonging/community integration. The survey included demographic questions and was distributed to participants through disability support agencies across two states. The final sample included 291 respondents. 1.3 Results The overall QoL‐Q scores ranged from 3.0 to 29.5 (Mean = 20.4, SD , 4.1), with considerable variation in mean scores both across and within domains. The two demographic areas that showed greatest predictive value for QoL were work status and accommodation issues. The loss of agency and control in choice of co‐residents influenced perceived QoL for empowerment and independence domain of QoL‐Q. 1.4 Conclusions The findings highlight QoL issues associated with policy decisions and support programmes for middle‐aged adults. The two key recommendations arising from the project are that future planning for post‐retirement or reduced working hours needs to commence at a much younger age than currently expected, and more attention needs to focus on facilitating individual decision‐making and choice within shared accommodation options

Description

Keywords

community care, empowerment issue, intellectual disability, residential services

Citation

Source

British Journal of Learning Disabilities

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31