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Preparing care home staff to manage challenging behaviours among residents living with dementia: A mixed-methods evaluation
Author(s) -
Niyah Campbell,
Ian Maidment,
Emma Randle,
Rachel Shaw
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
health psychology open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.691
H-Index - 15
ISSN - 2055-1029
DOI - 10.1177/2055102920933065
Subject(s) - dementia , intervention (counseling) , burnout , experiential learning , nursing , psychology , medicine , perception , gerontology , clinical psychology , pedagogy , disease , pathology , neuroscience
We evaluated an intervention designed to manage challenging behaviours of people with dementia. Framework analysis of interviews ( n = 21) showed the intervention modified practice and perceptions. The intervention ( n = 58; power calculation proposed n = 160 for medium effect) had no significant effect on attitudes to dementia for time ( p = .42) or care home ( p = .15). The Maslach burnout scores did not change significantly for person-centredness for time ( p = .83) or care home ( p = .29). Hope scores showed a significant effect post-intervention ( p = .004), but this was not maintained. No significant main effect was found for care home ( p = .36). Experiential learning enabled staff to experience benefits of person-centred care firsthand.

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