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Dementia in rural settings: a scoping review exploring the personal experiences of people with dementia and their carers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2023

Jennifer Rhiannon Roberts*
Affiliation:
DSDC Wales Research Centre, School of Medical and Health Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, UK
Gill Windle
Affiliation:
DSDC Wales Research Centre, School of Medical and Health Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, UK
Anna Story
Affiliation:
DSDC Wales Research Centre, School of Medical and Health Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, UK
Emilie V. Brotherhood
Affiliation:
Dementia Research Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, UK
Paul M. Camic
Affiliation:
Dementia Research Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, UK
Sebastian J. Crutch
Affiliation:
Dementia Research Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, UK
Joshua Stott
Affiliation:
Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, UCL, London, UK
Mary Pat Sullivan
Affiliation:
Faculty of Education and Professional Studies, Nipissing University, North Bay, Ontario, Canada
Adetola Grillo
Affiliation:
Faculty of Education and Professional Studies, Nipissing University, North Bay, Ontario, Canada
*
*Corresponding author. Email: j.roberts@bangor.ac.uk
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Abstract

Rural areas tend to be inhabited by more older people and thus have a higher prevalence of dementia. Combined with lower population densities and more sparse geography, rural areas pose numerous barriers and costs relating to support and resource provision. This may leave people with dementia in rural places at a significant disadvantage, leading to a heavy reliance on informal support networks. The present study explores the personal experiences of people living with dementia and carers living in rural areas, seeking to discover both benefits and challenges, as well as recommendations within the literature for improving the lives of those affected by dementia in rural areas. A scoping review following the framework of Arksey and O'Malley identified 60 studies that describe or discuss the personal experience of dementia (either by the person with dementia or carer), in relation to living in rural or remote geographical areas. Four overarching themes were derived, namely the possible benefits of living in a rural community (supportive rural communities), sources of strength described by people affected by dementia in rural areas (managing and coping), detrimental aspects of living in a rural community (rural community challenges) and difficulties with dementia care services. Three further themes yielded recommendations for improving the experience of dementia in rural areas. This review highlights some potential opportunities related to living in rural areas for people living with dementia. These often come with parallel challenges, reflecting a delicate balance between being well-supported and being in crisis for those living in rural areas. Given the limited access to formal services, supporting people with dementia in rural areas requires input and innovation from the people, organisations and services local to those communities.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Dementia is one of the greatest health challenges of our time and in 2012 the World Health Organization (WHO) and Alzheimer's Disease International (ADI) called on governments worldwide to make it a public health priority (WHO and ADI, 2012). People are living longer, and the risk of developing dementia increases with age (although this is not the only risk factor). There are currently around 50 million people living with dementia globally and this number is projected to increase to 132–135 million by 2050 (ADI, 2013; WHO, 2017), concomitantly with the ageing world population.

Worldwide, younger people tend to migrate to urban places, whereas older adults are more likely to live in rural areas (WHO, 2015) which in turn is associated with a higher prevalence of dementia (Russ et al., Reference Russ, Batty, Hearnshaw, Fenton and Starr2012; Jia et al., Reference Jia, Wang, Wei, Zhou, Jia, Li, Tang, Chu, Zhou, Zhou and Cui2014; Weden et al., Reference Weden, Shih, Kabeto and Langa2018). Not only this, but the lower population density and the geography of rural areas pose additional barriers and costs relating to service and support provision, travel costs and time, and discrepancies in resource allocation (Szymczynska et al., Reference Szymczynska, Innes, Mason and Stark2011; Palmer et al., Reference Palmer, Appleby and Spencer2019). This may leave people with dementia in rural places at a significant disadvantage compared to their urban counterparts, leading to a heavy reliance on unpaid sources of support from family and friends. The international economic cost of dementia was estimated at US $1.3 trillion in 2019, with on average 50 per cent of these costs being attributable to informal care-giving (WHO, 2021).

National dementia strategies put an emphasis on those facing inequalities in care, including those who live in rural and remote places. For example, in the United Kingdom (UK), the Dementia Action Plan for Wales (Welsh Government, 2018) acknowledges that living with dementia in rural and remote areas is a core area of consideration across the dementia care pathway, particularly as the environment/neighbourhood may support or exacerbate the experience of living with dementia. Internationally, the new dementia strategy for Canada recognises the challenges faced by people living in rural and remote locations as well as those providing services and support and the need for solutions and interventions to be specific to their unique needs (Public Health Agency of Canada, 2019).

The specific issues facing people affected by dementia in rural areas were examined by Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011), who reviewed international published scientific literature on dementia care and service provision in rural and remote settings in relation to informal/family care-giving. Twenty-six papers were included in their synthesis, with considerable variation in how rurality was defined, including standardised classifications, definitions developed by researchers, as well as general descriptions (e.g. ‘rural’). The majority of the studies focused on the experience, use and barriers to formal service provision (15 papers), with limited attention given to the education and support needs of carers (six papers), and a ‘remarkable lack of consideration’ (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011: 44) given to personal, carer experiences (five papers). The review included studies reporting low service availability and inappropriate services in rural areas, as well as other factors affecting both formal and informal support, such as a lack of awareness of what is available, a lack of dementia awareness and education, geographical distance and transport issues, lack of privacy and stigma. There were some conflicting findings around obligation to care, with care-giving being perceived as a family duty in some rural areas, whereas in another study rural carers felt less obliged than urban carers to provide care. Some perceived benefits of living in a rural area were also reported, such as support from extended family and the wider community, and personal relationships with health-care providers. The authors draw attention to the need for more research about the impact of rurality on care-giving and the needs of rural informal family carers and conclude:

Rural areas globally have aging populations that will require adaptable solutions to their local context. However, to date there is insufficient information available to develop rural dementia care services that support the person with dementia and their family carers. (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011: 45)

Ten years on, Bayly et al. (Reference Bayly, Morgan, Chow, Kosteniuk and Elliot2020) published a review addressing the gap in the literature around education and support needs, putting a specific focus on service needs, accessibility and use in rural areas for both carers and people living with dementia. Evidence was sought from studies of people affected by dementia, service providers and interventions between 1997 and 2017, finding that most rural areas were not equipped to provide sufficient services to people affected by dementia.

The Alzheimer's Society indicates a notable absence of contemporary research and knowledge about the impact of dementia in rural Wales and that ‘without better data it will be impossible to tackle’ (Alzheimer's Society, 2016: 9), rendering policy solutions difficult to formulate. While service and education availability and needs are certainly an important factor to consider in their impact on people with dementia in rural areas, this may not paint the whole picture of the challenges and benefits of living in such areas. The present study pays attention to the limited evidence around the personal experiences of rural carers highlighted by Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011), but importantly extending to also incorporate the personal experiences and perceptions of people living with dementia themselves. A decade later, it is timely to discover to what extent this gap in the literature has been addressed, and how any new evidence may contribute to supporting people living with dementia in rural areas.

Aim of this review

This paper explores the personal experiences of people affected by dementia in rural places. It will update the findings of informal family carers conducted by Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) and identify further research that focuses on the personal experiences of the person living with dementia. Specifically, it will undertake a scoping review to map the research in this area systematically. The following research question was formulated:

  • What is known from the literature about the personal experiences of people affected by dementia (carers and those living with the condition) who live in a rural area?

Methods

Study design

A scoping review followed the framework of Arksey and O'Malley (Reference Arksey and O'Malley2005), comprising five stages: identifying the study purpose; study identification; screening process; data extraction; and collating, summarising and reporting results. The PRISMA-ScR checklist was followed to ensure clarity of reporting (Tricco et al., Reference Tricco, Lillie, Zarin, O'Brien, Colquhoun, Levac, Moher, Peters, Horsley, Weeks, Hempel, Akl, Chang, McGowan, Stewart, Hartling, Aldcroft, Wilson, Garritty, Lewin, Godfrey, Macdonald, Langlois, Soares-Weiser, Moriaty, Clifford, Tuncalp and Straus2018). The approach of a scoping review enables a broad range of literature to be captured, including all types of study design. As the purpose is to provide an overview of the research, sources of evidence are not critically appraised and their quality assessed as in a systematic review. However, the reviewers critically appraised the findings of the included papers to ensure the authors' interpretation represents the data presented. The team developed a protocol as a working document to guide the review process.

Study identification

A comprehensive search of the literature was conducted from inception to 19 February 2019, updated 17 April 2020 and 14 July 2021. Databases searched were Applied Social Science Index and Abstracts (ASSIA), Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL PLUS), Proquest, PsycINFO, MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library. Searches of titles and abstracts were undertaken by JRR, using combinations of the following terms: (dement* OR Alzheimer* OR memory problem*) AND (rural OR remote OR countryside).

Screening

Inclusion criteria

Peer-reviewed journal articles of empirical research were included that describe or discuss the personal experience of dementia (either by the person with dementia or carer), in relation to living in rural or remote geographical areas. No a priori definitions were specified for ‘rural’ or ‘remote’ and the review sought studies where the authors clearly identified these aspects as the setting for their work, either by being explicit in their description that the research took part in a rural area or by providing an official definition of ‘rural’. All types of study designs were considered except for previous literature reviews. ‘Grey literature’ was included if the report/article was publicly available (e.g. from a website) and presented primary research. The timescale for inclusion of papers was: (a) literature on carers from 2010 (to update the findings of Innes et al., Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) and (b) no time restriction for literature on people living with dementia, to capture any work potentially not found in the systematic review by Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011).

Exclusion criteria

Articles were excluded at title/abstract screening if they were not published in English (English being the language available to the authors), non-human participants; molecular/cellular-focused research; not focused on carers or people living with dementia; drug trials; about any condition other than dementia (e.g. obesity, schizophrenia, epilepsy, depression); focused on professionals/paid carers/service providers (due to being focused on the lived experiences of people personally affected by dementia); the location is clearly not related to rural or remote places. At full-text reviewing, articles were excluded if they did not describe the first-hand experience of rural living/caring; if the data were the perceptions of service providers; intervention or service effectiveness studies; non-empirical research (e.g. commentaries, editorials, book reviews or opinion pieces); dissertation studies if they were presented elsewhere within peer-reviewed journal articles.

Study selection

Titles and abstracts were screened by JRR and a random sample of 10 per cent checked by AS. Full-text screening (N = 149) was carried out by JRR, AS and AG, with 80 per cent agreement regarding inclusion/exclusion. Discrepancies (20%) were discussed before making a final decision.

Data charting

A data extraction document was developed by the lead author. This captured publication information (authors, year and country); study design (objectives, method and participants); descriptive information (e.g. definition of rural); key findings relating to living with dementia in a rural area; and lessons learned from their research as reported by authors of the included papers. This was first piloted where JRR and AS independently reviewed and extracted data for three studies. These were then compared and discussed, with a high degree of accuracy reported. Following agreement, papers were sorted alphabetically, divided equally between JRR and AS, and reviewed independently. Following the data extraction by JRR and AS, GW independently reviewed each individual study and the corresponding extraction to verify accuracy, completeness and to minimise potential for bias. The lead author also later revisited all papers for additional quality assurance. Minor amendments were recorded, and the table updated.

Collation, summarising and synthesis

Thematic analysis of the extracted data was performed by JRR, guided by Braun and Clarke (Reference Braun and Clarke2006). Data pertaining to the personal experience of living in a rural area by people living with dementia and/or carers were extracted. Initially, a deductive thematic analysis approach was undertaken using the preconceived overarching categories ‘opportunities’ and ‘challenges’ in relation to the research question, in order to identify aspects of rural living that may be beneficial and supportive and/or detrimental and unhelpful. Themes were then generated taking an inductive approach via an iterative process of reading, generating initial codes, re-reading, reviewing and refining (through discussions between JRR and GW). Reflecting the iterative process of the review, discussions within the review team suggested that there was an opportunity to identify some of the solutions and recommendations made by the authors of the included papers in relation to the challenges and opportunities identified. A further category, ‘lessons learned’, was used to identify suggestions within the included papers for future care provision. Further consideration of the analysis led to some of the themes initially considered under the ‘opportunities’ category to be represented by a more appropriate overarching theme ‘coping and managing’. Similarly, ‘lessons learned’ are reframed under the overarching theme ‘improving the experience of dementia in rural areas’. A narrative synthesis of the data is presented below.

Results

Database searches yielded 4,286 records, reduced to 2,053 after removal of duplicates. From title and abstract screening, 149 studies were identified as being potentially relevant and were screened in full-text and an additional two peer-reviewed articles and three publicly available reports were also included. After full-text screening, 60 articles were included: 30 qualitative, 20 quantitative and ten mixed-methods studies. Figure 1 visualises the process, including the reasons for exclusion.

Figure 1. A PRISMA flow diagram of the exclusion process.

Table S1 in the online supplementary material provides an overview of the study characteristics (including full reference citation, study objectives, methods, participants, definition of rural or remote, and findings relating to the research question regarding the personal experience of living with dementia in rural places). The highest number of studies was from Canada (N = 18), followed by the United States of America (USA; N = 13), Australia (N = 8), the UK (N = 8), Sweden (N = 2), Austria (N = 2), Uganda (N = 2), Germany (N = 2). and one study from Mexico, China, Tanzania, Italy and Ireland. The majority of the studies were qualitative and cross-sectional. Study participants were primarily carers (N = 34; with nine of these also including interviews with service providers or community members) or both carers and people with dementia (N = 22), with some of these (N = 11) also including service providers. Data from service providers or community members were not extracted. Only four studies focused on the person living with dementia alone (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Clare, Jones, Martyr, Nelis, Quinn, Victor, Lamont, Rippon and Matthews2018; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021; Müller et al., Reference Müller, Kropp, Cardona, Michalowsky, van den Berg, Teipel, Hoffmann and Thyrian2021).

There is a lack of cultural diversity both within and between studies. Ethnicity information was provided in 13 studies. Of these, nine were directly interested in the experiences of people with dementia/carers by race/ethnicity (Kaufman et al., Reference Kaufman, Kosberg, Leeper and Tang2010; Sun et al., Reference Sun, Kosberg, Kaufman and Leeper2010a, Reference Sun, Kosberg, Leeper, Kaufman and Burgio2010b; Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Champion, Kwak and Fleischmann2018; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019; Yahalom, Reference Yahalom2019; Disbrow et al., Reference Disbrow, Arnold, Glassy, Tilly, Langdon, Gungor and Davis2021). The remaining four disclosed that the samples included a high percentage (almost all) of Caucasian participants.

The majority of studies do not disclose the type of dementia diagnosed (N = 44). Alzheimer's disease was the most frequently reported diagnosis among study participants, with six papers explicitly focusing on experiences with diagnoses of Alzheimer's disease and in papers that reported multiple diagnoses (N = 10) Alzheimer's disease was consistently the most frequent (N = 9 papers). Other diagnoses included mild cognitive impairment (N = 6 papers), frontotemporal dementia (N = 4 papers), Lewy body dementia (N = 3 papers), vascular dementia (N = 4 papers), young onset (N = 1 paper), and frontotemporal dementia and primary progressive aphasia (N = 1 paper).

No detailed definition of rural was provided in over half of the studies (N = 31). For those that did define rural, definitions were made by distance from urban/population centres (N = 7), population density/populations of less than a defined number (N = 8), both distance from urban centre and population information (N = 5), rural–urban commuting area codes (N = 2), US Census Bureau definition (N = 2) and other definitions (N = 5; see Table S1 in the online supplementary material).

Figure 2 visualises the themes derived from the analysis. Two themes reflected possible benefits of living in a rural community: ‘the person living with dementia continuing to contribute’, reflecting the opportunities for ongoing activity; and ‘support from the wider community’, reflecting the potential cohesion within a rural community. ‘Coping and managing’ includes sources of strength described by people affected by dementia in rural areas, including ‘support from family and friends’, ‘signs of resilience’, ‘strength through religion’ and ‘the internet’. Detrimental aspects of living in a rural community included ‘the risk of isolation’, ‘the impact of stigma’, ‘carer distress’, ‘the financial impact' and challenges with ‘the physical environment'. A further overarching theme, ‘difficulties with dementia care services’, included five sub-themes: ‘diagnosis difficulties’, ‘complex care systems’, ‘lack of provision affecting continuity of care’, ‘transport and travelling’ and ‘language and cultural sensitivity’. Three themes reflected improving the experience of dementia in rural areas: ‘involving people affected dementia’, ‘provision of services that are fully person-centred’ and ‘improving education and awareness for professionals and public’.

Figure 2. A visual representation of findings.

Table 1 summarises the findings of the analysis according to the themes (and sub-themes), noting which studies provide evidence in support of each theme.

Table 1. Themes and sub-themes derived from the thematic analysis

Note: GP: general practitioner.

Rural communities as beneficial and supportive

Continuing to contribute

Thirteen studies reflected the theme ‘continuing to contribute’ (see Table 1). Continuing with normal activities, keeping busy or being useful is important for people with dementia in rural places. In the earlier stages of dementia, people still have goals that they want to achieve and wish to contribute to their communities by participating in activities, including being productive and working. People with dementia wish to be included, to be enabled to do what they can and do what they enjoy.

Support from the wider community

Familiarity and being known in a community is described as supportive, with people looking out for the person with dementia and offering either practical or emotional support if needed (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Clarke and Bailey, Reference Clarke and Bailey2016; von Kutzleben et al., Reference von Kutzleben, Reuther, Dortmann and Holle2016; Wiersma and Denton, Reference Wiersma and Denton2016; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017). This is at least up to the point where symptoms progress to a stage where they become perceived as ‘anti-social’ (e.g. hallucinations, abusive behaviours, wandering, incontinence; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011) or ‘publicly confronting’ (Orpin et al., Reference Orpin, Stirling, Hetherington and Robinson2014).

Knowing everyone within a community can lead to a sense of safety for the person with dementia and their carer (Gilmour, Reference Gilmour2004; Clarke and Bailey, Reference Clarke and Bailey2016; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021), even to the extent of communities having informal systems of monitoring people with dementia (Wiersma and Denton, Reference Wiersma and Denton2016). A study in Canada discovered although understanding of dementia as a condition was minimal within rural communities, there was an increased awareness when a member of the community was struggling with their cognition (Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015). Caring for people with dementia was a community responsibility, providing them with support that enabled them to remain at home for as long as possible. This type of community awareness is given as an explanation by Burgener et al. (Reference Burgener, Buckwalter, Perkhounkova, Liu, Riley, Einhorn, Fitzsimmons and Hahn-Swanson2015) for people with dementia living in rural settings being less susceptible to the effects of perceived stigma than those in urban places.

Appreciation of support groups or memory cafes is described in some studies, when they were available and accessible (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Szymczynska and Stark2014; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021), providing the opportunity to share experiences with others who understand their situation (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020).

Managing and coping

Support from family and friends

Eighteen studies describe the importance of support from family and friends (see Table 1). Family and friends are a key resource for rural care-giving and coping (Vellone et al., Reference Vellone, Piras, Venturini, Alvaro and Cohen2012; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015; Branger et al., Reference Branger, Burton, O'Connell, Stewart and Morgan2016a; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020) and rural carers found it easier to get help from family and friends than urban carers (Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015).

More recent work aimed to better understand approaches to care-giving, comparing rural and urban settings (Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017). They again found family and friends to be important, irrespective of the geographical setting. However, carers from rural areas were more accepting of care-giving challenges, attempting to maintain a sense of normality, whereas in urban areas care-giving was viewed more as an obligation. Rural carers talked about themselves being part of a family or couple, with a stronger sense of ‘togetherness’.

Dotchin et al. (Reference Dotchin, Paddick, Longdon, Kisoli, Gray, Dewhurst, Dewhurst and Walker2014) reported lower carer burden scores in the rural Hai district of Tanzania in carers of people with dementia as compared to Parkinson's disease, suggesting this may be due to dementia being considered a normal part of ageing in Hai and societal roles expecting younger family members to care for older people. Similarly, some Aboriginal families feel responsibility to care for people with dementia, and to maintain connections to culture (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019), and Nankinga et al. (Reference Nankinga, Maling, Chemali, Wakida, Obua and Okello2020) reports families consistently stepping in to care for people with dementia in south-western Uganda. This is consistent with findings reported in Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) where care-giving was seen as a family duty in Japan, highlighting the impact of cultural values and societal roles on uptake of both informal and formal dementia care.

People with dementia in rural areas appreciate the support provided by family (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Alzheimer's Society, 2017; Nankinga et al., Reference Nankinga, Maling, Chemali, Wakida, Obua and Okello2020). It allows them to maintain a social life, keep up meaningful activities and, in some instances, to remain at home (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Nankinga et al., Reference Nankinga, Maling, Chemali, Wakida, Obua and Okello2020). In Wales, people with dementia were more positive about their care and support when provided by a family or friend support network as opposed to formal sources of support, and some carers noted they were comfortable providing personal care (Alzheimer's Society, 2017).

Signs of resilience

Some carers are fortunate to experience positive aspects of care-giving. A recent study found better mental health in rural as opposed to urban carers, irrespective of the symptoms of the person with dementia (Alhasan et al., Reference Alhasan, Hirsch, Jackson, Miller, Cai and Lohman2021). This is supported in part by Ehrlich et al. (Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015) who found carers to be highly satisfied with caring for a relative with dementia, despite the major limitations of care-giving on their daily lives, although this was true in both urban and rural areas. Other studies report relationships between life satisfaction and quality of life (Vellone et al., Reference Vellone, Piras, Venturini, Alvaro and Cohen2012) and social support (Kaufman et al., Reference Kaufman, Kosberg, Leeper and Tang2010) by rural carers.

Although many aspects of carer burden are expressed by family carers, they also describe rewarding aspects such as emotional closeness (Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017), strong family cohesion, the opportunity to give something good back to the person with dementia, noticing expressions of gratitude from them, knowing that care at home is what the person would prefer, and the acquisition of new knowledge and skills to better cope with the situation (Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Essl-Maurer, Wurm, Seymer, Kriechmayr, Mann, Osterbrink and Flamm2020).

Strength through religion

Religion is a frequently used coping mechanism for rural carers (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Kosberg, Kaufman and Leeper2010a, Reference Sun, Kosberg, Leeper, Kaufman and Burgio2010b; Branger et al., Reference Branger, Burton, O'Connell, Stewart and Morgan2016a; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020). Supporting findings from Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011), religiosity has been associated with lower carer burden in African American than white rural carers (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Kosberg, Leeper, Kaufman and Burgio2010b). The authors suggest that religious involvement provides spiritual and social benefits to carers, being particularly important in rural locations where access to formal services is scarce.

The internet

The internet has been reported as an important source of information and support to people affected by dementia in rural areas, particularly in more recent years (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012, Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Champion, Kwak and Fleischmann2018; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020). For example, online resources such as websites and social media platforms were used by rural widows for information and support, both during care-giving years and thereafter (Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020). However, this is not always the case, with one study finding that no rural carers had used the internet for support, for reasons such as lack of computer use, access or awareness of available online resources (Disbrow et al., Reference Disbrow, Arnold, Glassy, Tilly, Langdon, Gungor and Davis2021).

Rural community challenges

Carer distress

It is well recognised that many carers are committed to supporting the person with dementia to remain at home for as long as possible, despite high physical and emotional costs to themselves, which is echoed in 11 studies in this review (see Table 1). Walsh et al. (Reference Walsh, Pertl, Gillespie, Lawlor, Brennan and O'Shea2021) found lower community care costs and lower rates of admission to long-term care in rural as opposed to urban areas, but this was attributed to families providing high levels of care with little support from the government. Carer burden has been linked to unmet needs from formal services (Li et al., Reference Li, Kyrouac, McManus, Cranston and Hughes2012) as well as to a lack of informal support (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Kosberg, Kaufman and Leeper2010a; Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Essl-Maurer, Wurm, Seymer, Kriechmayr, Mann, Osterbrink and Flamm2020) in rural areas. However, explorations of rural–urban differences found no effect of rurality on burden, distress, worry, frustration and loneliness (O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Germaine, Burton, Stewart and Morgan2013; Branger et al., Reference Branger, O'Connell and Morgan2016b; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017). O'Connell et al. (Reference O'Connell, Germaine, Burton, Stewart and Morgan2013) suggest the lack of rural–urban difference may be linked to rural carers depending more on informal support to substitute for the services that are lacking in rural areas.

The behavioural and psychological symptoms of a person with dementia were found to be related to carer burden (Heggie et al., Reference Heggie, Morgan, Crossley, Kirk, Wong, Karunanayake and Beever2012; Ervin et al., Reference Ervin, Pallant and Reid2015; Stewart et al., Reference Stewart, Morgan, Karunanayake, Wickenhauser, Cammer, Minish, O'Connell and Hayduk2016; Yang et al., Reference Yang, Ran and Luo2019). Again, these findings corroborate those from people in urban places, but the difference being that those in rural areas may have limited formal support from services to address such issues (Heggie et al., Reference Heggie, Morgan, Crossley, Kirk, Wong, Karunanayake and Beever2012), and/or that they may be reluctant to utilise services due to the effects of stigma in rural areas (Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Eßl-Maurer, Seymer, Osterbrink and Flamm2022).

Impact of stigma

In contrast to the benefits of support from the wider community, being known within a community also leads to issues relating to stigma. People with dementia can refrain from sharing their diagnosis with others, or be reluctant to seek help, due to the stigma associated with it and fears of gossip (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012, Reference Forbes, Blake, Thiessen, Finkelstein, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid and Culum2013, Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Wiersma and Denton, Reference Wiersma and Denton2016; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017; Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019).

Stigmatisation after disclosure of the diagnosis can lead to feelings of estrangement and hurt (Vellone et al., Reference Vellone, Piras, Venturini, Alvaro and Cohen2012; Clarke and Bailey, Reference Clarke and Bailey2016; Chisholm and Bischoping, Reference Chisholm and Bischoping2019; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021), as people visit less often than before (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Alzheimer's Australia, 2007; Alzheimer's Society, 2017), particularly as symptoms progress (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011).

Risk of isolation

Although most descriptions of family support have been positive, some have been less so. Ehrlich et al. (Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015) discovered that although rural carers found it easier than urban-living carers to get help from family and friends, the rural carers experienced more feelings of abandonment from family. Similarly, other carers have reported limited tangible support from friends and family (Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020), particularly if they live apart (Alzheimer Australia, 2007; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019).

Financial impact

Rural carers disclosed financial burden (Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Ainamani et al., Reference Ainamani, Alele, Rukundo, Maling, Wakida, Obua and Tsai2020), which can affect the health of people with dementia and carers (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011). Two studies found rural carers reported higher financial difficulties than those living in an urban area (Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020). Others reported financial differences by race (Kaufman et al., Reference Kaufman, Kosberg, Leeper and Tang2010; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Champion, Kwak and Fleischmann2018) and by a decreased ability to live well in deprived areas (Wu et al., Reference Wu, Clare, Jones, Martyr, Nelis, Quinn, Victor, Lamont, Rippon and Matthews2018).

The physical environment

While the rural environment can offer people with dementia comfort, it can become dangerous as the disease progresses as people with dementia can face challenges navigating the rural landscape (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021). Furthermore, within farming communities it can become difficult to keep people with dementia safe, with worries about accidents involving machinery and animals being an issue (Kelly and Yarwood, Reference Kelly and Yarwood2018).

Difficulties with dementia care services

Many studies (N = 35) discussed issues relating to dementia care services, with most highlighting inconsistency in provision and variability in perceived usefulness. Five sub-themes were identified (diagnosis difficulties; complex care systems; lack of provision affecting continuity of care; travel and geographical distances; language and cultural sensitivity).

Diagnosis difficulties

Eight studies reported difficulties in obtaining a diagnosis, describing limited access to specialists in rural areas and diagnosis depending on the skills and knowledge of primary care providers/general practitioners (GPs) (see Table 1). In the UK, carers from rural Scotland (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Szymczynska and Stark2014) reported satisfaction with the support from GPs and community mental health teams, with GPs reported to go ‘the extra mile’, whereas in Wales, rural GPs were often accessible, but people were often reluctant to visit the GP because they believed there to be no appropriate support or information available to their needs (Alzheimer's Society, 2017). Prorok et al. (Reference Prorok, Hussain, Horgan and Seitz2017) described people in rural areas (in contrast to urban) expressing more favourable comments with regards to their primary care providers and obtaining a diagnosis, although people with dementia often had to prompt them for a diagnosis and referrals. Two studies report feelings of relief from dyads or carers upon obtaining the diagnosis (Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014; Mattos et al., Reference Mattos, Nilsen and Lingler2018).

Complex care systems

Although people affected by dementia from rural and urban areas share many challenges, there is evidence for additional challenges in accessing and utilising services in rural areas. From a farming perspective, Kelly and Yarwood (Reference Kelly and Yarwood2018) described barriers to engaging with agencies, with families affected by dementia feeling that services were ‘urban centric’ and did not fit with the farming lifestyle. Furthermore, Prorok et al. (Reference Prorok, Hussain, Horgan and Seitz2017) describe challenges with home care and long-term care that were reported more by people with dementia in rural (in comparison to urban) areas, particularly the difficulties navigating the system to obtain home care and/or long-term care as well as their dissatisfaction with aspects of this care. A similar narrative is presented elsewhere (Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019). Moreover, people have reported difficulties accessing services due to lack of awareness of what is available to them (Alzheimer's Australia, 2007; Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015) and fewer than half of carers in the study by Ervin and Reid (Reference Ervin and Reid2015) utilised services that were available to them, suggested to be due to problems with referral mechanisms. However, these findings are not always the case, with a recent study in Austria finding high levels of awareness and utilisation of home care services in a rural area, as compared to a more urban area, and greater utilisation to be driven primarily by older age of carers, and female gender of the person with dementia (Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Eßl-Maurer, Seymer, Osterbrink and Flamm2022). The authors discovered a decrease in service utilisation in connection with higher levels of disruptive behaviour of people with dementia, similar to other findings describing underutilisation of services by care-givers of people with dementia with behavioural and psychological symptoms (Ervin and Reid, Reference Ervin and Reid2015), suggested to be partly a consequence of the stigma associated with dementia in rural areas.

Lack of provision affecting continuity of care

A lack of resources restricts the quality and quantity of community-based services and support (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011, Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012; Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015; Herron et al., Reference Herron, Rosenberg and Skinner2016; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Walsh et al., Reference Walsh, Pertl, Gillespie, Lawlor, Brennan and O'Shea2021) and a recent study by Saunders and Groh (Reference Saunders and Groh2020) revealed that formal carer support was noticeably more limited in rural as compared to urban areas. Concordantly, informal carers express a need for more and better services in rural and remote places (Dal Bello-Haas et al., Reference Dal Bello-Haas, Cammer, Morgan, Stewart and Kosteniuk2014). Despite wishes for people with dementia to remain at home, there is often not enough support for them to do so without adversely affecting the health of the carer. Unmet service needs have been linked to carer burden (Li et al., Reference Li, Kyrouac, McManus, Cranston and Hughes2012), lower carer quality of life (Vellone et al., Reference Vellone, Piras, Venturini, Alvaro and Cohen2012) and stress/burnout (Alzheimer's Australia, 2007). Carers in rural Wales felt taken for granted and used as a ‘free service’ and felt service provision was not forthcoming due to their commitment (Alzheimer's Society, 2017).

Travel and geographical distances

People with dementia often must travel to urban centres or significant distances to access appropriate services, support groups and formal care (Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Innes et al., Reference Innes, Szymczynska and Stark2014; Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015; Herron et al., Reference Herron, Rosenberg and Skinner2016; Mattos et al., Reference Mattos, Nilsen and Lingler2018; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019), leading to reliance on carers to provide transport (Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021). This is consistent with the findings from Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) and is likely to be one of the reasons for which rural families use fewer services than urban families.

The impact of the distance travelled by formal services between clients include late and shortened home care visits (Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019) and infrequent visits (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012), leading to negative consequences for people with dementia. Likewise, long distances from services and support contributes to isolation of people with dementia (Alzheimer's Australia, 2007; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013). Where long-term care beds are not available locally, family and friends of people with dementia who are relocated for care face travelling great distances to visit (Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015).

Language and cultural sensitivity

Twelve studies described the importance of considering culture or traditions in rural places (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Kosberg, Leeper, Kaufman and Burgio2010b; Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Vellone et al., Reference Vellone, Piras, Venturini, Alvaro and Cohen2012; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Blake, Thiessen, Finkelstein, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid and Culum2013; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Dotchin et al., Reference Dotchin, Paddick, Longdon, Kisoli, Gray, Dewhurst, Dewhurst and Walker2014; Alzheimer's Society, 2017; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Champion, Kwak and Fleischmann2018; Chisholm and Bischoping, Reference Chisholm and Bischoping2019; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019; Yahalom, Reference Yahalom2019; Disbrow et al., Reference Disbrow, Arnold, Glassy, Tilly, Langdon, Gungor and Davis2021). For instance, there is evidence to suggest that some indigenous cultures view dementia as a normal part of ageing (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019; Yahalom, Reference Yahalom2019). Yahalom (Reference Yahalom2019) describes indigenous Zapotec carers who normalised the forgetfulness of people with dementia, maintaining Alzheimer's disease as a modern condition associated with stresses of non-traditional ways of living. Aboriginal carers can feel obliged to provide care to maintain connections to family, community and culture (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019), and children were expected to care for their elders in Hai, Tanzania (Dotchin et al., Reference Dotchin, Paddick, Longdon, Kisoli, Gray, Dewhurst, Dewhurst and Walker2014). In rural Wales, some people affected by dementia noted the lack of Welsh-speaking staff and information in Welsh as a barrier to accessing dementia-specific support and information (Alzheimer's Society, 2017).

Improving the experience of dementia in rural areas

Involving people affected by dementia

Maintaining a social life and social inclusion emerged as important themes, both for people living with dementia and their carers. Preserving a sense of normality by continuing with long-term friendships and activities is important for the person with dementia and their carer (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011, Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018) and enabling them to do the things they enjoy (Herron et al., Reference Herron, Rosenberg and Skinner2016; Alzheimer's Society, 2017). Connecting people affected by dementia via peer-to-peer opportunities may reduce social isolation and provide opportunities for additional informal support (Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019). It is also recommended that people living with dementia in rural places are actively involved in decisions that affect their lives, including service development and improvement (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011, Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012, Reference Forbes, Blake, Thiessen, Finkelstein, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid and Culum2013; Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014; Herron et al., Reference Herron, Rosenberg and Skinner2016; Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Essl-Maurer, Wurm, Seymer, Kriechmayr, Mann, Osterbrink and Flamm2020).

Services that are fully ‘person-centred’

Akin to Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011), the most frequent recommendation found in the present review was the need for providing tailored, appropriate services, considering the individual needs of rural people. Appropriate services should be based on the opinions, wishes and plans of the people that they are for (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011, Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015, Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017; Clarke and Bailey, Reference Clarke and Bailey2016; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021). Policy recommendations also emphasise addressing the unique needs of people affected by dementia in rural areas, ensuring informal support does not replace formal services (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011; Dal Bello-Haas et al., Reference Dal Bello-Haas, Cammer, Morgan, Stewart and Kosteniuk2014; Wiersma and Denton, Reference Wiersma and Denton2016).

Suggestions include supporting families to provide meaningful care-giving and maintaining a normal life (Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015, Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017), enhancing existing resources available to carers and families (Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019), supporting people to remain connected and included in society (Clarke and Bailey, Reference Clarke and Bailey2016) and training care staff to participate in meaningful activities with people in their homes (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011). Li et al. (Reference Li, Kyrouac, McManus, Cranston and Hughes2012) suggest that to meet the needs of people with dementia in rural places, it is important to address the psychological and social needs of the carer, particularly to reduce levels of carer burden. Concordantly, others also recommend that services should work to support carers to reduce levels of burden (Heggie et al., Reference Heggie, Morgan, Crossley, Kirk, Wong, Karunanayake and Beever2012; Werntz et al., Reference Werntz, Dodson, Schiller, Middlebrooks and Phipps2015; Ainamani et al., Reference Ainamani, Alele, Rukundo, Maling, Wakida, Obua and Tsai2020).

Improving education and awareness for professionals and the public

Due to the lack of specialists in rural areas there are proposals for education, awareness raising and training for service staff, and ensuring rural GPs are trained to diagnose and support people with dementia sufficiently (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014; Alzheimer's Society, 2017). Furthermore, educating people with a recent diagnosis of dementia about the services and supports that are available to them will assist them to make their own decisions about their future (Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015). Carers have also recommended that education, training and courses be made available to them, to help them prepare and to enhance their skills in providing the best care possible (Alzheimer's Australia, 2007; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Innes et al., Reference Innes, Szymczynska and Stark2014; Alzheimer's Society, 2017; Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019), and researchers have made similar recommendations for supporting carers (Werntz et al., Reference Werntz, Dodson, Schiller, Middlebrooks and Phipps2015; Cox et al., Reference Cox, Hoang, Goldberg and Baldock2019; Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Essl-Maurer, Wurm, Seymer, Kriechmayr, Mann, Osterbrink and Flamm2020). A recent study of carers of people with dementia in rural Kentucky revealed gaps in information needs identified during a question-and-answer session, including risk factors, behaviour management, diagnosis and medication (Bardach et al., Reference Bardach, Gibson, Parsons, Stauffer and Jicha2021).

Promotion of dementia support groups and educative sessions for the public about dementia are needed to increase awareness and acceptance (Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014; Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018) and thus reduce stigma and gossip (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Blake, Thiessen, Finkelstein, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid and Culum2013; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017; Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019) in rural communities. Several studies suggest promoting such groups/sessions using online or video technology (Alzheimer's Australia, 2007; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Champion, Kwak and Fleischmann2018; Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019; Saunders and Groh, Reference Saunders and Groh2020; Bardach et al., Reference Bardach, Gibson, Parsons, Stauffer and Jicha2021), as well as by other means (Li et al., Reference Li, Kyrouac, McManus, Cranston and Hughes2012; Vellone et al., Reference Vellone, Piras, Venturini, Alvaro and Cohen2012; Alzheimer's Society, 2017).

Capitalising on the impact and influence of other existing rural community assets is also encouraged in various ways, such as educating rural service staff further (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011; Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Innes et al., Reference Innes, Szymczynska and Stark2014; Ervin and Reid, Reference Ervin and Reid2015), involving church leaders (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Kosberg, Leeper, Kaufman and Burgio2010b; Nankinga et al., Reference Nankinga, Maling, Chemali, Wakida, Obua and Okello2020) and making use of physical resources available in rural communities (e.g. village halls) (Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Alzheimer's Society, 2017).

Discussion

To our knowledge this is the first scoping review focusing on the first-hand experiences of both people with dementia and their informal carers living in rural places. It updates a previous systematic review exploring dementia care and service provision in rural and remote settings in relation to informal/family care-giving (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011), presenting evidence from 60 new studies, and demonstrating the acceleration in interest in the subject area within the last decade. It adds a wealth of new evidence to the initial findings of Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) and adds important new insights by putting a focus on the opportunities as well as the challenges experienced by both carers and people living with dementia. This is important, because if policy and practice changes are to be made to improve the experience and support of people in rural areas, we must first understand how the people themselves experience life with dementia within such places.

Some of the findings around dementia care services, such as a lack of provision, lack of awareness of what is available and transport challenges, support findings presented in the reviews of Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) and Bayly et al. (Reference Bayly, Morgan, Chow, Kosteniuk and Elliot2020). There is still a dire need for formal care service improvement in rural areas. Despite national dementia strategies stressing the importance of funding dementia support services, including those who live in rural areas (e.g. Welsh Government, 2018), austerity has led to significant reductions in service provision (Thomson et al., Reference Thomson, Figueras, Evetovits, Jowett, Mladovsky, Maresso, Cylus, Karanikolos and Kluge2015), with challenges being exacerbated in rural areas. The cost of dementia care is high, with evidence suggesting a higher financial burden associated with living rurally (Kaufman et al., Reference Kaufman, Kosberg, Leeper and Tang2010; Smith et al., Reference Smith, Flicker, Shadforth, Carroll, Ralph, Atkinson, Lindeman, Schaper, Lautenschlager and LoGiudice2011; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015; Xie et al., Reference Xie, Champion, Kwak and Fleischmann2018; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019). Families are often left to either provide care informally, or to pay for formal care, often having to relocate the person with dementia to long-term care in urban areas, due to lack of provision in rural areas (e.g. Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015). A recent review found that relocation often has detrimental effects on the person with dementia, with the most positive care outcomes relating to involving people with dementia in decisions about their care and maintaining a sense of normality where possible (Ryman et al., Reference Ryman, Erisman, Darvey, Osborne, Swartsenburg and Syurina2019), supporting findings from the present review that people with dementia should be involved in decisions that affect their lives (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011, Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012, Reference Forbes, Blake, Thiessen, Finkelstein, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid and Culum2013; Herron et al., Reference Herron, Rosenberg and Skinner2016) and preserving a sense of normality through continuing with long-term friendships and activities (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011, Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017).

An important challenge highlighted by this review that may be greater in rural areas (as opposed to urban areas) relates to the experience of getting a diagnosis of dementia. Difficulties obtaining a diagnosis due to a lack of specialised dementia services often leads to dependence on the skills and knowledge of local GPs for making and delivering the diagnosis (Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014; Orpin et al., Reference Orpin, Stirling, Hetherington and Robinson2014; Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015; Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019). This is a potential area for solutions/interventions to upskill existing rural community formal resources, eliciting calls to improve training and education for rural GP practices around diagnosis and post-diagnosis support for people with dementia within their communities (e.g. Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014). Having confidence in support provided by GPs may alleviate some of the psychological burdens of living with the diagnosis, for both people with dementia and carers.

It is important to acknowledge that a number of the difficulties faced by people affected by dementia in rural areas are applicable to people with dementia more broadly and not to rural life alone, such as reliance on informal support, carer distress, loss of friends and the negative experiences associated with stigma. However, rurality may exacerbate these difficulties due to limited access to services and the close-knit nature of many communities whereby individuals with dementia may be alienated due to a lack of awareness and education.

While much research on rural dementia focuses on negative experiences, inequalities and deficits, this review highlights some potential opportunities related to living in rural areas for people living with dementia. These often come with parallel challenges within the literature, essentially reflecting a delicate balance between being well-supported and being in crisis for those living in rural areas. For example, family and friends are a key resource for successful care-giving in rural communities, likely attributable to lack of service availability in rural areas leading to dependency on other sources of support (Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015). Additionally, rural carers have expressed a desire for training and education to equip them with the skills to best support people with dementia (Alzheimer's Australia, 2007; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Innes et al., Reference Innes, Szymczynska and Stark2014; Alzheimer's Society, 2017; Bauer et al., Reference Bauer, Fetherstonhaugh, Blackberry, Farmer and Wilding2019; Gibson et al., Reference Gibson, Holmes, Fields and Richardson2019). However, an opposing narrative was found whereby there was a risk of isolation if family lived away or stopped visiting (Alzheimer Australia, 2007; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Boström, Mazaheri, Heikkilä and Emami2015; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2019).

Furthermore, living in a close-knit rural community, often for many years, appears to elicit a unique asset for people affected by dementia. For example, the wider community has been shown to step up and provide additional support and religious involvement can also be a key area of rural support. Moreover, the opportunity for people with dementia to continue to contribute was also a key theme, as was the recommendation to involve people with dementia. However, there were also findings related to stigma in which people would gossip in rural communities, leading to social withdrawal and reluctance to seek help (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012, Reference Forbes, Blake, Thiessen, Finkelstein, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid and Culum2013, Reference Forbes, Blake, Bayly, Peacock, Hawranik and Innes2018; Saunders, Reference Saunders2013; Wiersma and Denton, Reference Wiersma and Denton2016; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017). Moreover, community support can be present until the presentation of ‘anti-social’ symptoms related to dementia (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Ward-Griffin, Kloseck, Mendelsohn, St-Amant, DeForge and Clark2011; Orpin et al., Reference Orpin, Stirling, Hetherington and Robinson2014). Accordingly, there may be more of a reluctance to utilise services as behavioural symptoms of dementia increase, assumed to be due to stigma also (Ervin and Reid, Reference Ervin and Reid2015; Krutter et al., Reference Krutter, Schaffler-Schaden, Eßl-Maurer, Seymer, Osterbrink and Flamm2022). These findings appear to suggest that given the correct ‘ingredients’ there can be benefits to living in a rural community, however, it is not guaranteed that families and the wider communities and environment will support people with dementia in rural places. Those who are neither supported informally by family or community, nor formally due to lack of service provision, are in grave danger of being left to fend for themselves.

While it is well-known that there is an inequity of access to formal services in rural areas, opportunities identified through this research relate to the potential for engaging and involving existing community members and resources. National and international policies promote the establishment of dementia-friendly communities to ensure people are socially included in their community and the WHO (2017) has called for global action to develop dementia-friendly initiatives. According to Li et al. (Reference Li, Keady and Ward2021), well-connected communities for people with dementia include connections with family, friends and neighbours through belonging, responsibilities and identification within groups; attachment to places in the community; and actively seeking to live independently and uphold community connections. This supports themes identified in the present study and strengthens the argument for policies to highlight dementia-friendly community initiatives in rural areas as a priority area, which have as yet received limited attention (Shannon et al., Reference Shannon, Bail and Neville2019; Gan et al., Reference Gan, Chaudhury, Mann and Wister2022). A key area for consideration is the potential of bolstering the skills, knowledge and awareness, of public and professionals living and working in rural areas, as well as capitalising on other assets within the rural environment that are considered supportive by community members (e.g. village halls, churches): supporting people with dementia in rural areas requires input and innovation from the people, organisations and services local to those communities.

Strengths and limitations

In relation to the methods of this study, a strength of the scoping review methodology is that it enables a broad overview of the literature to be captured, rather than evaluating the quality of existing literature (Levac et al., Reference Levac, Colquhoun and O'Brien2010). A further strength is that this method allowed inclusion of grey literature, gaining wider insight into the experiences of people affected by dementia in rural areas from numerous important reports. To enhance trustworthiness, a comprehensive search strategy was used across multiple databases with no date restrictions, and study identification and selection was subject to a double review process.

The results of this review presented a number of gaps in this area of research. First, the majority of research originates from Western countries. Very few studies present findings from developing countries (N = 3). This is an important area for consideration given the differing status of health care, finances and societal traditions that can exist in developing countries. However, as the searches were performed in English and sought studies presented in English, we acknowledge that some evidence from developing countries could have been missed. Moreover, a lack of cultural diversity is observed within the samples, with only 13 studies sharing ethnicity information (four of which merely stated that their samples consisted of a high percentage (almost all) Caucasian participants). Future research must put effort into gaining knowledge from more diverse backgrounds.

In addition, only studies that examined the lived experiences of people with dementia and carers were considered. Exploration of the effectiveness of technology and online interventions may further our understanding of what is available to rural-dwelling people to assist with life with dementia. Given the surge in interest in this type of intervention research over the past decade, we chose not to include intervention studies in the present review, as it is something that would benefit from being explored separately. The importance of this has increased since the COVID-19 pandemic has encouraged and required people to access more online resources and support.

Innes et al. (Reference Innes, Morgan and Kostineuk2011) highlighted variability in how authors defined rurality in their studies, which was confirmed in the present review. For instance, many Canadian studies define rurality by distance from an urban centre (e.g. O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Germaine, Burton, Stewart and Morgan2013; Di Gregorio et al., Reference Di Gregorio, Ferguson and Wiersma2015) or as ‘all territory outside of an urban centre’ (e.g. Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Finkelstein, Blake, Gibson, Morgan, Markle-Reid, Culum and Thiessen2012; Wiersma and Denton, Reference Wiersma and Denton2016). Internationally, there are definitions of rurality by population density, with variation in descriptions ranging between 0.1 (Saskatchewan, Canada; Dal Bello-Haas et al., Reference Dal Bello-Haas, Cammer, Morgan, Stewart and Kosteniuk2014) to 13.1 persons per square kilometre (Sweden; Ehrlich et al., Reference Ehrlich, Emami and Heikkilä2017). Some provide the population figures of regions studied, with ‘rural’ ranging from less than 3,000 (Scotland; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Clare, Jones, Martyr, Nelis, Quinn, Victor, Lamont, Rippon and Matthews2018) to less than 10,000 people (e.g. Wales; Alzheimer's Society, 2017), and others have simply used a general description. This lack of a universal definition of rurality in both research and policy makes comparison across studies and countries very difficult. Within Canada alone, this difficulty has been highlighted on numerous occasions (e.g. Ministerial Advisory Council on Rural Health, 2002; 8; DesMeules et al., Reference DesMeules, Pong, Lagacé, Heng, Manuel, Pitblado, Bollman, Guernsey, Kazanjian and Koren2006: 7). What is evident is that what constitutes ‘rural’ differs both between and within countries and it follows that there is likely to be associated variance in the experiences of inhabitants across degrees of rurality. While it seems unlikely that international consensus will be reached in defining rurality, a challenge for future research would be to conduct a case study exploring the experience of dementia across multiple rural areas, building up a detailed ‘rural profile’ of each location prior to conducting interviews. This may allow comparison on a continuum of rurality, with remoteness being at the more extreme end.

Implications for research

The majority of studies presented in this review do not disclose the type of dementia diagnosed to participants and, of those reported, most appear to report the more common types of dementia. The few studies that include a small number of people with rarer forms of dementia as participants, in addition to other subtypes (Morgan et al., Reference Morgan, Walls-Ingram, Cammer, O'Connell, Crossley, Bello-Haas, Forbes, Innes, Kirk and Stewart2014; Stewart et al., Reference Stewart, Morgan, Karunanayake, Wickenhauser, Cammer, Minish, O'Connell and Hayduk2016; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Clare, Jones, Martyr, Nelis, Quinn, Victor, Lamont, Rippon and Matthews2018), do not differentiate between people with different forms of dementia in their analyses. As mentioned above, there may be differences in experiences according to the symptoms displayed, therefore an important avenue for future investigation would be to explore the experiences of people living with rarer forms of dementia in rural areas.

There appears to be a gap in the research literature regarding exploring the experiences of people with dementia alone (i.e. without simultaneously studying carers, or other individuals), with four studies doing so in the present review (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Wu et al., Reference Wu, Clare, Jones, Martyr, Nelis, Quinn, Victor, Lamont, Rippon and Matthews2018; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021; Müller et al., Reference Müller, Kropp, Cardona, Michalowsky, van den Berg, Teipel, Hoffmann and Thyrian2021). Moreover, despite there being a total of 19 studies that included the voice of people with dementia by means of qualitative interviews (people with dementia alone, N = 2; people with dementia and carers/others, N = 17), only four of these explicitly claimed to have undertaken individual interviews with people with dementia (Innes et al., Reference Innes, Sherlock and Cox2003; Gilmour, Reference Gilmour2004; Herron and Rosenberg, Reference Herron and Rosenberg2017; Hicks et al., Reference Hicks, Innes and Nyman2021). Others undertook focus groups, joint interviews, or the methods do not clarify whether or not people with dementia were interviewed alone (in studies that also included other participants). In most of these cases, it is difficult to estimate the amount of input provided by the people with dementia themselves. While it can be beneficial to include others in the interview process, there is also acknowledgement that proxy accounts or the presence of others may influence the narrative that is presented from the perspective of people with dementia (Oldfield, Reference Oldfield2021). For example, Murphy et al. (Reference Murphy, Jordan, Hunter, Cooney and Casey2015: 801) found that many studies combined data from people with dementia and carers, often resulting in a reduced focus on the person with dementia. Inclusion and recruitment of more people with dementia may require finding creative ways to make the research design ‘fit’ for participants, employing flexible and adaptive strategies that are tailored to both person and location, such as, for example, building relationships prior to data collection and adapting methods to fit around participant capacity, preferences and routines (Webb et al., Reference Webb, Williams, Gall and Dowling2020). Future research, policy and practice efforts should consider ensuring the perspective of people with dementia is clearly sought and presented wherever possible, for dementia-friendliness of a community is more likely to be achieved if the voices of those living with a diagnosis are at the forefront of consultations and decisions affecting their lives.

Conclusion

This scoping review identified articles that describe or discuss the personal experience of dementia, either by the person with dementia or carer, in relation to living in rural or remote geographical areas. Challenges of rural living included difficulties with dementia care services and detrimental aspects of living in a rural community. Conversely, opportunities identified through this research relate to the potential for engaging and involving existing community members and resources in improving the experiences of people affected by dementia. Input and innovation from the people, organisations and services local to rural communities provide scope for improving the lives of people affected by dementia in those areas.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X2300003X.

Author contributions

JRR contributed to the conception and design of the study, conducted the literature search, identified, extracted and analysed the data, and drafted the manuscript. GW contributed to the conception and design of the study, and analysis and interpretation of data. AG and AS assisted with identifying and extracting the data. All authors were involved in the drafting and revisions of the manuscript. All authors approved the publication of the article.

Financial support

This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC); and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). This work is part of the Rare Dementia Support Impact project (The impact of multicomponent support groups for those living with rare dementias (ES/S010467/1)). ESRC is part of UK Research and Innovation. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the ESRC, UKRI, the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. Rare Dementia Support is generously supported by the National Brain Appeal (https://www.nationalbrainappeal.org/).

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Ethical standards

Ethical approval was not required.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. A PRISMA flow diagram of the exclusion process.

Figure 1

Figure 2. A visual representation of findings.

Figure 2

Table 1. Themes and sub-themes derived from the thematic analysis

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