Evaluating a National Person-Centered Training Program to Strengthen the Dementia Care Workforce
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Summary
This project will compare two training models of an evidence-based online dementia care training program for direct care staff in assisted living to a waitlist control: 1) essentiALZ training and 2) essentiALZ training + Project ECHO. It will examine the extent to which each model is implemented and achieves its intended outcomes to improve staff knowledge and attitudes, change care practices, and improve the wellbeing of staff, residents, and residents' family members. Results will inform next steps in dementia care training for the assisted living (AL) and broader long-term care workforce. To examine these outcomes, data will be collected from AL staff and families over the course of 6 months. Staff will complete questionnaires and participate in interviews (as applicable) at baseline, post-training, 3-months, and 6-months. Families will participate in interviews at baseline, 3-months, and 6-months.
Description
More than 75% of persons living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias who reach 80 years of age require residential long-term care, which is increasingly provided in assisted living (AL). Across the country, almost 29,000 AL communities with more than 996,000 beds have become the primary residential care provider for persons with dementia: 90% of AL residents have cognitive impairment and 42% have recorded moderate or severe dementia, with actual rates being higher. AL provides supportive but not nursing services; consequently, virtually all care is provided by direct care workers (nu…