Culturo-Linguistic Congruity in Care Homes - V2

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    Language and Cultural Congruity in Care Homes - implications for Well-Being?

  • IRAS ID

    230597

  • Contact name

    Conor Martin

  • Contact email

    mhp802@bangor.ac.uk

  • Sponsor organisation

    Bangor University

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    0 years, 7 months, 9 days

  • Research summary

    The study examines how the well-being of first language Welsh people who live in care homes is affected by the linguistic and cultural surroundings of their living environment. In particular, the concept of congruity, which is the degree of harmony and consistency between two (or more) things, is studied. A culturo-linguistically congruent environment for people in a care home would mean that the residents would be cared for by people who can speak their language and understand their values. In theory, the well-being of residents in these circumstances is affected by the degree of congruity provided, and this study sets out to discover how. The rationale for this work is illustrated in a scoping review carried out by the authors prior to commencing this study, which found that cultural and linguistic congruity was advantageous for people living in care homes (especially for those who were cognitively impaired), and that incongruity was disadvantageous. The absence of linguistic congruity is a strong predictor for decreased well-being in people in such settings, due to communication barriers between residents and care staff, which seem to result mainly from the loss of the resident’s second language skills as cognitive skills decline. The purpose of this study is confirm whether these findings apply to bilingual people in Wales, and whether culturo-linguistic congruity should be a priority for those individuals (especially those who are cognitively impaired) who reside in care homes in this part of the UK.

  • REC name

    Wales REC 5

  • REC reference

    17/WA/0372

  • Date of REC Opinion

    22 Nov 2017

  • REC opinion

    Favourable Opinion