Affect Balance and Relationship With Well-Being in Nursing Home Residents With Dementia. Kolanowski, A., M., Van Haitsma, K., Meeks, S., & Litaker, M. American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias, 1, 2014. abstract bibtex The purpose of this exploratory study was to determine whether the balance of positive to negative affect can discriminate states of well-being in nursing home residents with dementia and whether affect balance is associated with activity engagement. Baseline data from a randomized clinical trial were used in this secondary analysis. Participants were 128 residents recruited from 9 nursing homes located in Pennsylvania. Participants were primarily female, Caucasian, and had a mean age of 86 years. Measures of agitation and affect were taken from video recordings of 10 observational sessions. Measures of engagement and self-reported mood were taken in real time. Ten percent of participants were categorized as having high well-being. These participants had a mean ratio of positive-negative affect of 2.21 (+/-0.50), a ratio significantly different than that of participants with moderate or low well-being. Affect balance was related to greater engagement in activity (r = .23; P = .008).
@article{
title = {Affect Balance and Relationship With Well-Being in Nursing Home Residents With Dementia},
type = {article},
year = {2014},
identifiers = {[object Object]},
keywords = {affect balance,dementia,nursing home residents,quality of life},
month = {1},
day = {8},
city = {1College of Nursing, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.},
id = {479675c8-f6f3-3dad-99f7-e3db6eb416de},
created = {2016-08-20T16:52:15.000Z},
file_attached = {false},
profile_id = {217ced55-4c79-38dc-838b-4b5ea8df5597},
group_id = {408d37d9-5f1b-3398-a9f5-5c1a487116d4},
last_modified = {2017-03-14T09:54:45.334Z},
read = {false},
starred = {false},
authored = {false},
confirmed = {true},
hidden = {false},
source_type = {JOUR},
notes = {ID: 68166; JID: 101082834; OTO: NOTNLM; aheadofprint},
folder_uuids = {06be5eb7-ff2d-415d-a16d-66085b37f653,f1983289-bfcc-4bbc-aa58-64df97457698},
private_publication = {false},
abstract = {The purpose of this exploratory study was to determine whether the balance of positive to negative affect can discriminate states of well-being in nursing home residents with dementia and whether affect balance is associated with activity engagement. Baseline data from a randomized clinical trial were used in this secondary analysis. Participants were 128 residents recruited from 9 nursing homes located in Pennsylvania. Participants were primarily female, Caucasian, and had a mean age of 86 years. Measures of agitation and affect were taken from video recordings of 10 observational sessions. Measures of engagement and self-reported mood were taken in real time. Ten percent of participants were categorized as having high well-being. These participants had a mean ratio of positive-negative affect of 2.21 (+/-0.50), a ratio significantly different than that of participants with moderate or low well-being. Affect balance was related to greater engagement in activity (r = .23; P = .008).},
bibtype = {article},
author = {Kolanowski, A M and Van Haitsma, K and Meeks, S and Litaker, M},
journal = {American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias}
}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"kbqeauWMcw2Jrrny6","bibbaseid":"kolanowski-vanhaitsma-meeks-litaker-affectbalanceandrelationshipwithwellbeinginnursinghomeresidentswithdementia-2014","downloads":0,"creationDate":"2017-11-23T19:05:18.343Z","title":"Affect Balance and Relationship With Well-Being in Nursing Home Residents With Dementia","author_short":["Kolanowski, A., M.","Van Haitsma, K.","Meeks, S.","Litaker, M."],"year":2014,"bibtype":"article","biburl":null,"bibdata":{"title":"Affect Balance and Relationship With Well-Being in Nursing Home Residents With Dementia","type":"article","year":"2014","identifiers":"[object Object]","keywords":"affect balance,dementia,nursing home residents,quality of life","month":"1","day":"8","city":"1College of Nursing, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.","id":"479675c8-f6f3-3dad-99f7-e3db6eb416de","created":"2016-08-20T16:52:15.000Z","file_attached":false,"profile_id":"217ced55-4c79-38dc-838b-4b5ea8df5597","group_id":"408d37d9-5f1b-3398-a9f5-5c1a487116d4","last_modified":"2017-03-14T09:54:45.334Z","read":false,"starred":false,"authored":false,"confirmed":"true","hidden":false,"source_type":"JOUR","notes":"ID: 68166; JID: 101082834; OTO: NOTNLM; aheadofprint","folder_uuids":"06be5eb7-ff2d-415d-a16d-66085b37f653,f1983289-bfcc-4bbc-aa58-64df97457698","private_publication":false,"abstract":"The purpose of this exploratory study was to determine whether the balance of positive to negative affect can discriminate states of well-being in nursing home residents with dementia and whether affect balance is associated with activity engagement. Baseline data from a randomized clinical trial were used in this secondary analysis. Participants were 128 residents recruited from 9 nursing homes located in Pennsylvania. Participants were primarily female, Caucasian, and had a mean age of 86 years. Measures of agitation and affect were taken from video recordings of 10 observational sessions. Measures of engagement and self-reported mood were taken in real time. Ten percent of participants were categorized as having high well-being. These participants had a mean ratio of positive-negative affect of 2.21 (+/-0.50), a ratio significantly different than that of participants with moderate or low well-being. Affect balance was related to greater engagement in activity (r = .23; P = .008).","bibtype":"article","author":"Kolanowski, A M and Van Haitsma, K and Meeks, S and Litaker, M","journal":"American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias","bibtex":"@article{\n title = {Affect Balance and Relationship With Well-Being in Nursing Home Residents With Dementia},\n type = {article},\n year = {2014},\n identifiers = {[object Object]},\n keywords = {affect balance,dementia,nursing home residents,quality of life},\n month = {1},\n day = {8},\n city = {1College of Nursing, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA.},\n id = {479675c8-f6f3-3dad-99f7-e3db6eb416de},\n created = {2016-08-20T16:52:15.000Z},\n file_attached = {false},\n profile_id = {217ced55-4c79-38dc-838b-4b5ea8df5597},\n group_id = {408d37d9-5f1b-3398-a9f5-5c1a487116d4},\n last_modified = {2017-03-14T09:54:45.334Z},\n read = {false},\n starred = {false},\n authored = {false},\n confirmed = {true},\n hidden = {false},\n source_type = {JOUR},\n notes = {ID: 68166; JID: 101082834; OTO: NOTNLM; aheadofprint},\n folder_uuids = {06be5eb7-ff2d-415d-a16d-66085b37f653,f1983289-bfcc-4bbc-aa58-64df97457698},\n private_publication = {false},\n abstract = {The purpose of this exploratory study was to determine whether the balance of positive to negative affect can discriminate states of well-being in nursing home residents with dementia and whether affect balance is associated with activity engagement. Baseline data from a randomized clinical trial were used in this secondary analysis. Participants were 128 residents recruited from 9 nursing homes located in Pennsylvania. Participants were primarily female, Caucasian, and had a mean age of 86 years. Measures of agitation and affect were taken from video recordings of 10 observational sessions. Measures of engagement and self-reported mood were taken in real time. Ten percent of participants were categorized as having high well-being. These participants had a mean ratio of positive-negative affect of 2.21 (+/-0.50), a ratio significantly different than that of participants with moderate or low well-being. Affect balance was related to greater engagement in activity (r = .23; P = .008).},\n bibtype = {article},\n author = {Kolanowski, A M and Van Haitsma, K and Meeks, S and Litaker, M},\n journal = {American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias}\n}","author_short":["Kolanowski, A., M.","Van Haitsma, K.","Meeks, S.","Litaker, M."],"bibbaseid":"kolanowski-vanhaitsma-meeks-litaker-affectbalanceandrelationshipwithwellbeinginnursinghomeresidentswithdementia-2014","role":"author","urls":{},"keyword":["affect balance","dementia","nursing home residents","quality of life"],"downloads":0},"search_terms":["affect","balance","relationship","well","being","nursing","home","residents","dementia","kolanowski","van haitsma","meeks","litaker"],"keywords":["affect balance","dementia","nursing home residents","quality of life"],"authorIDs":[]}