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Enjoying the front-line of dementia care
 — an integrative analysis of what care home staff report makes them happy at work
Author(s)Jill Manthorpe
Journal titleWorking with Older People, vol 18, no 4, 2014
PublisherEmerald, 2014
Pagespp 167-175
Sourcewww.emeraldinsight.com/wwop.htm
KeywordsDementia ; Care homes ; Care home staff ; Job satisfaction ; Literature reviews.
AnnotationHigh turnover of staff in the long-term dementia care sector contributes to poor quality care and lack of continuity of care in the UK and many other countries. This paper explores the research evidence on what care assistants report they enjoy when working in front-line dementia care jobs in long-term care facilities. An integrative analysis was used to study research findings focusing on the front-line workforce in care homes. The literature review sought to capture key findings, including overviews of research, from studies from 1990 to mid-2014 that have considered the positive experiences of front-line care home staff working with people with dementia. There is a great deal of research investigating care home staff's job satisfaction. Much of this highlights the importance of personal, social and managerial relationships. Common themes continue to be reported. There is potential for work on improving care assistant experiences in care homes but also a need to address long-standing inequities affecting the care home sector. Some studies are not precise about which staff groups they are investigating in studies about care homes and many concentrate on the problems staff report. Measures of job satisfaction vary. When exploring dementia-related care, not all studies are clear about whether or not care home residents have dementia. Many studies have investigated the views of care assistants working with people with dementia in care homes that address happiness in their work, often reported as job or work satisfaction, and these should be consulted when developing dementia services or managing care homes. As with other parts of the social care workforce, employers and managers need to be aware of effective and acceptable workforce reforms and ways to reduce turnover. This review suggests the value of investigating positive aspects of care work with people with dementia living in care homes. Greater attention could be paid to job satisfaction in social care more widely. (RH).
Accession NumberCPA-150529235 A
ClassmarkEA: KW: QRM: WL5: 64A

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