posted on 2021-10-24, 17:39authored byAlice Spann, Luc de Witte, Mark Hawley, Marieke Spreeuwenberg
Semi-structured interviews were conducted between March and July 2019 in Scotland: Carers were eligible if they i) worked at least 20hrs/week; ii) cared at least 5hrs/week; iii) had combined work and care for at least 6 months; and iv) cared for a person with dementia living in a community setting.
The topic guide included issues such as general challenges when combining work and care; any support used or needed; the impact of autonomy at work (regarding breaks, schedule and place) on these challenges; and their experiences, wants and needs regarding technologies (electronic and/or digital) which could offer support.
Full ethical approval was granted by the ScHARR Research Ethics Committee at the University of Sheffield (Reference 022994).
An Excel sheet with an overview of participants' characteristics for context can be requested from the author.
Funding
Economic and Social Research Council (award ES/P009255/1, Sustainable Care: connecting people and systems, 2017-21, Principal Investigator Sue Yeandle, University of Sheffield)
History
Ethics
The project has ethical approval and the number is included in the description field
Policy
The data complies with the institution and funders' policies on access and sharing
Sharing and access restrictions
The data requires access restrictions, explained in the description field, and the files are closed