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Relationship between the Housing Facility Type of Aging Persons who are Developmentally Disabled and their Activities

This study investigated the relationship between housing facility type and activities of aging persons who are developmentally disabled (ADD) in rural Manitoba, Canada. A pictoral instrument was developed and administered to 29 persons who are ADD living in five facility types. Of thirty activities,...

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Published in:Education and training in mental retardation 1988-06, Vol.23 (2), p.147-155
Main Authors: Chornoboy, Eleanor G., Harvey, Carol D. H.
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Language:English
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creator Chornoboy, Eleanor G.
Harvey, Carol D. H.
description This study investigated the relationship between housing facility type and activities of aging persons who are developmentally disabled (ADD) in rural Manitoba, Canada. A pictoral instrument was developed and administered to 29 persons who are ADD living in five facility types. Of thirty activities, residents of senior citizen facilities performed more overall and sedentary activities more frequently than participants who lived in foster homes, community residences, familial homes, or in independent living situations. Respondents who had rooms located off the main floor of the facility spent more time at overall and sedentary activities than respondents whose rooms were on the main floor. Additionally, respondents who received one-to-one training reported more activities overall than respondents who did not receive one-to-one training. Females performed more overall activities and more active ones than males, and females did active activities more frequently than males. Human factors seem to be at least as important as facility type in determining activity patterns. The findings are discussed, suggesting need for more research on the impact of housing upon activities of persons who are ADD, in order to maximally plan living environments. Description of the method of directly questioning the ADD population in this research provides opportunity for replication.
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Females performed more overall activities and more active ones than males, and females did active activities more frequently than males. Human factors seem to be at least as important as facility type in determining activity patterns. The findings are discussed, suggesting need for more research on the impact of housing upon activities of persons who are ADD, in order to maximally plan living environments. 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identifier ISSN: 1042-9859
ispartof Education and training in mental retardation, 1988-06, Vol.23 (2), p.147-155
issn 1042-9859
language eng
recordid cdi_jstor_primary_23878438
source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects Caregivers
Developmental disabilities
Disabled persons
Elders
Foster home care
Housing
Intellectual disability
Older adults
Training devices
title Relationship between the Housing Facility Type of Aging Persons who are Developmentally Disabled and their Activities
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