Authors
Jared Howes, Yvonne Denier, Tijs Vandemeulebroucke, Chris Gastmans
Published in
Journal of medical Internet research. Volume 28. Pages e91667. Jul 07, 2026. Epub Jul 07, 2026.
Abstract
Locator devices are increasingly being used to help manage wandering among people living with dementia. While these technologies can be beneficial, they also raise significant ethical questions. These ethical questions are faced in both the development and use of these devices.
The aim of this study is to develop and present a question-based ethical framework that can guide both the use and the development of locator devices in dementia care, ensuring that stakeholder needs and values are balanced effectively.
A four-step process informed the framework's creation: (1) literature collection (systematic searches of empirical, normative, and development-focused research were conducted); (2) content analysis (an inductive qualitative analysis of collected literature identified key ethical concerns, arguments, and stakeholder perspectives); (3) iterative framework drafting (insights were translated into open-ended questions and refined through regular team discussions); and (4) stakeholder consultation (feedback from health professionals, older adults, family members, developers, and ethicists was used to refine and finalize the framework).
The resulting framework is organized around 3 themes-vision, process, and impact-each containing guiding questions that encourage dialogical reflection and decision-making. For "use," these questions help care communities clarify goals, define processes, and assess outcomes. For "development," they aid developers in articulating device objectives, anticipating risks, and aligning product features with end-user values.
By providing guiding questions that can be adapted to local needs and contexts, this framework fosters a more inclusive, transparent, and ethically accountable approach to developing and using locator devices in dementia care.
PMID:
42412959
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 08 Jul 2026.
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