Feasibility of a two-part person-centred care initiative for people living with dementia in acute hospitals: A mixed methods study
The personal profile offers a potentially useful tool to support person-centred care of people living with dementia in hospital. To date, how profiles can be implemented into nurses’ work practices is not established. The aim is to establish the feasibility of a Person-Centred Care package, includin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of nursing studies advances 2021-11, Vol.3, p.100040-100040, Article 100040 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The personal profile offers a potentially useful tool to support person-centred care of people living with dementia in hospital. To date, how profiles can be implemented into nurses’ work practices is not established.
The aim is to establish the feasibility of a Person-Centred Care package, including a personal profile and staff education program to enhance implementation.
Exploratory convergent mixed methods approach.
Four units of a tertiary health service, two intervention units and two comparison units set in southeast Queensland, Australia.
Person living with dementia and family carer dyads and staff.
Practicality was determined using participation logs, audit and review of meeting minutes. Acceptability was determined using interviews with family carers and nursing staff. Efficacy was evaluated using pre-post comparison survey design, assessing staff knowledge using the Dementia Knowledge Assessment Scale and person-centred care using the Person-centredness of Older People with cognitive impairment in Acute Care-revised scale.
Practically, the personal profile was distributed to 95 and 73% of patients in the two intervention units. Of the 18 people living with dementia who consented to participate, only 6 (33%) had a This is Me form completed. The three-part education program was well attended (n = 190 participants). In terms of acceptability, carers’ (n = 5) experienced variable quality of engagement from nurses. In interviews, nurses (n = 18) experienced increased confidence to engage carers, in part attributed to local leadership, but attitudes towards care appeared to be influenced by perceived time constraints. For efficacy, completion of both surveys at all time points and in all units was 50% and higher. Dementia knowledge significantly improved in the intervention group (p |
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ISSN: | 2666-142X 2666-142X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijnsa.2021.100040 |