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A best‐evidence review of intervention studies for minimizing resistance‐to‐care behaviours for older adults with dementia in nursing homes
Author(s) -
Konno Rie,
Kang Hee Sun,
Makimoto Kiyoko
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.12432
Subject(s) - psychological intervention , context (archaeology) , dementia , medicine , resistance (ecology) , nursing , intervention (counseling) , randomized controlled trial , burnout , critical appraisal , alternative medicine , clinical psychology , paleontology , ecology , disease , surgery , pathology , biology
Aim To conduct a best‐evidence review of non‐pharmacological interventions for resistance‐to‐care behaviours of nursing home residents with dementia in a personal‐care context. Background Resistance to care is a major source of staff burnout in nursing homes and it is also a safety issue for the staff. Design Best‐evidence review. Data Sources We searched for non‐pharmacological intervention studies published from 1990–2012, written in English. Review Methods The search identified 19 intervention studies that examined the effects of interventions to reduce the resistance‐to‐care behaviours of nursing home residents with dementia in a personal‐care context. These 19 papers met the quality assessment requirements of the critical appraisal criteria for experimental studies, which were published by the Joanna Briggs Institute. Results Only three studies were RCT s and the rest were quasi‐experimental. The sample size ranged from 7–127. Nine music interventions, such as pre‐recorded music played to a group or playing a resident's preferred music, during his or her personal care, resulted in significant reductions in resistance‐to‐care behaviours. Resistance‐to‐care behaviours also were significantly reduced in three of four bathing interventions that focused on person‐centred care. In the ability‐focused interventions, only two out of five studies reported significant reductions in resistance‐to‐care behaviours. Conclusion Non‐pharmacological interventions are options to consider to reduce resistance‐to‐care behaviours in older people with dementia, even though the evidence level is low, given the lack of alternatives. More randomized controlled trials are recommended to confirm the effects of non‐pharmacological interventions during personal care.

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