Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11667/246
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dc.contributorBowes, Alison-
dc.contributor.otherESRC - Economic and Social Research Councilen_GB
dc.coverage.spatialUKen_GB
dc.creatorBowes, Alison-
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-24T09:34:00Z-
dc.date.available2025-02-24T09:34:00Z-
dc.date.created2022-10-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11667/246-
dc.description.abstractThe e-Delphi exercise aimed to address a limitation of previous literature on designing homes for healthy cognitive ageing, namely that outcomes had been researcher-defined and did not reflect the perspectives of older people or professionals working in design, construction and delivery of housing. The exercise was preceded by a questionnaire which suggested outcomes, and the e-Delphi exercise itself had three rounds, as follows (source Bowes et al 2023): Round 1: Panellists were invited to pick their ‘top ten’ outcomes from a list of options concerning • the characteristics of a supportive home, • what activities the home should support, • how people should feel in a supportive home, • desired outcomes for communities, and • desired outcomes for professionals in home design and development, in construction and in housing supply and management. Round 2: Panellists were presented with results from Round 1 and invited to agree or disagree with a series of consensus statements about characteristics of supportive homes, derived from the results. They were then asked to consider further • areas of disagreement from Round 1, • ordering and categorising feeling/emotions when living in a supportive home, • ordering and categorising activities that a home should support, • their beliefs about how making changes to a home might or might not support desired activities more easily. Round 3: Panellists were presented with further results from Round 1 then asked to focus on the impacts of supportive design for industry and government and what kinds of changes might be needed to mainstream supportive design. These included: • legislative change • industry regulation • awareness in industry • awareness among home owners/tenants Panellists were older people and professionals involved in designing and delivering housing for healthy cognitive ageing. Five main outcome areas meaningful to panellists were identified: staying independent, feeling safe, living in an adaptable home, enabling physical activity and enabling enjoyed activities. These were demonstrated to include multiple factors that panellists felt could contribute to them.en_GB
dc.description.tableofcontentsThere are two files containing data: DesHCA_eDelphi_Pre-Survey Contains all the responses to the presurvey which was used to identify a range of outcomes to be explored in the eDelphi exercise. The variables are the questions. Tab 1 contains all responses. Tab 2 contains all the additional comments. Tab 3 includes all the older people. Tab 4 provides older people’s feedback. Tab 5 includes all the professionals. Tab 6 provides professionals’ feedback. Tab 7 summarises the feedback. The questionnaire is also provided for reference in a separate file: eDelphi_PreSurvey. DesHCA_eDelphi_Combined_Dataset Contains all the responses to the three rounds of eDelphi questionnaires. The variables are the questions, with each round designated R1, R2 or R3. There are four files containing the questionnaires: eDelphi_Presurvey eDelphi_R1 (round one) eDelphi_R2 (round two) eDelphi_R3 (round three) The questionnaire files include the consent rubric at the beginning.en_GB
dc.language.isoengen_GB
dc.publisherUniversity of Stirlingen_GB
dc.relationBowes, A (2025): Outcomes-focused eDelphi consensus exercise data archive for the Designing for Healthy Cognitive Ageing (DesHCA) Project. University of Stirling. Dataset. http://hdl.handle.net/11667/246en_GB
dc.relation.isreferencedbyBowes, A. Davison, L. Dawson, A. Pemble, C. (2024) Outcomes of design to support healthy cognitive ageing: modified e-Delphi exercise with older people and professionals. BMC Geriatrics. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-024-05085-zen_GB
dc.rightsRights covered by the standard CC-BY 4.0 licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/en_GB
dc.subjectAgeingen_GB
dc.subjectHomesen_GB
dc.subjectCognitive impairmenten_GB
dc.subjectHousingen_GB
dc.subjectPolicyen_GB
dc.subjectCommunity developmenten_GB
dc.subject.classification::Sociologyen_GB
dc.subject.classification::Design::Architecture History, Theory and Practiceen_GB
dc.subject.classification::Social policyen_GB
dc.titleOutcomes-focused eDelphi consensus exercise data archive for the Designing for Healthy Cognitive Ageing (DesHCA) Projecten_GB
dc.typedataseten_GB
dc.contributor.emaila.m.bowes@stir.ac.uken_GB
dc.identifier.projectidES/V016059/1en_GB
dc.title.projectDesigning homes for healthy cognitive ageing: co-production for impact and scale (DesHCA)en_GB
dc.contributor.affiliationUniversity of Stirling (Dementia and Ageing)en_GB
dc.description.notesThis dataset is one of several linked to the DesHCA project which aimed to develop designs for homes that supported healthy cognitive ageing, as well as physical and sensory health, which would be appealing for older people, and practical, affordable and scalable for housing developers and providers.en_GB
dc.identifier.wtid1622817en_GB
Appears in Collections:University of Stirling Research Data

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