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Multidisciplinary attitudes to people with dementia
 — training and environmental factors play a role in caring for people with dementia in a Cardiac Catheterisation Laboratory
Author(s)Karen Ainsworth, Cliff Richardson
Journal titleQuality in Ageing and Older Adults, vol 18, no 4, 2017
PublisherEmerald, 2017
Pagespp 235-245
Sourcehttp://www.emeraldinsight.com/loi/qaoa
KeywordsMedical workers ; Multi disciplinary ; Training [welfare work] ; Attitude ; Medical care ; Hospital services ; Dementia ; Evaluation ; Qualitative Studies.
AnnotationMultidisciplinary attitudes and environmental factors affecting dementia care in the Cardiac Catheter Laboratory (CCL) were explored in a hospital CCL in the North of England. The authors utilised the Dementia Attitudes Scale, which incorporates two subscales: Social Comfort and Dementia Knowledge. In addition, a newly devised questionnaire asking about perceptions of how the CCL environment affected care of patients with dementia was added. 87 questionnaires were distributed, and 62 were returned (71% response rate). Years' experience in the CCL was associated with lower Social Comfort scores. Dementia training was associated with higher mean Dementia Attitudes Scale and Social Comfort scores. Participants who had undertaken "professional studies" had higher Dementia Attitudes Scale and Dementia Knowledge mean scores but "on-the-job" training was perceived as most beneficial. Unit co-ordinators and nurses felt the CCL was an unfavourable environment for patients with dementia. Care was perceived to be impaired by environmental functionality, equipment and the presence of ionising radiation. The small sample limits generalisability. Although the Dementia Attitudes Scale is a validated questionnaire, it has not been widely used, so reliability of these results is unclear. Caring for patients with dementia has unique challenges, especially in areas like the CCL. These results suggest that practical experience and training can affect the perception of staff to patients with dementia; hence, there may be a need to assess what would be the most appropriate training to give health professionals in the future. The authors believe this to be the first multi-professional research study into care of patients with dementia in a specialised acute unit. This was the most diverse sample known to have attitudes to dementia measured quantitatively in an acute hospital department. The results need to be replicated before practice should be changed. (RH).
Accession NumberCPA-171208205 A
ClassmarkQT: 3DM: QW: DP: LK: LD: EA: 4C: 3DP

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