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The purpose of this study is to adapt, pilot test, and evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of DIGNITY (Decision-making In aGing and demeNtIa for auTonomY) for Preference-Based Care in Nursing Homes as a new evidence-based intervention to support nursing home staff to safely honor care and activity preferences of residents' living with dementia in rural, typically under resourced nursing home communities.
Full description
Of 6.5 million older Americans are living with Alzheimer's disease and related forms of dementia (ADRD), two thirds will die in a nursing home (NH) where staff are not prepared to deliver a minimal level of federally mandated care. Care in NHs is delivered by an ever-changing workforce of 1.3 million staff members who are responsible to provide person-centered care (PCC)- that is care based on knowing and honoring residents preferences for care and activities of daily living. NH residents have reported they are not satisfied with efforts to honor their preferences for everyday living and care activities. For residents living with ADRD this can lead to a loss of dignity, anger, agitation, isolation, depression, and negative social interactions between residents ultimately reducing quality of life. A prominent, known barrier to honoring residents' preferences is the predominantly risk adverse attitudes and behaviors of NH staff. DIGNITY (Decision-making in aging and dementia for autonomy) is novel multi-level intervention based in theory and evidence aimed at empowering nursing home staff to negotiate residents' risky preferences by addressing intrinsic and system barriers to safely honoring a resident's preferences with decision aids, care planning, and staff coaching/education. In the proposed project, we will implement DIGNITY in a pilot cluster randomized trial of 120 nursing home staff and residents across four rural nursing homes located in Pennsylvania. Our aims are to: 1.) To explore stakeholder perspectives on the relevance and feasibility of implementing the DIGNITY intervention in rural, underserved nursing home communities; and 2.) examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of DIGNITY within four rural, underserved nursing homes. Outcomes will be evaluated at baseline and 12 weeks following baseline education on the DIGNITY protocol. This study is a critical next step in developing evidence-based interventions that target gaps in direct-care workforce skills needed to enhance quality of care delivery to persons with ADRD living in NHs.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria for Nursing Homes:
Exclusion Criteria:
Convenience sampling will be used to recruit nursing home staff and residents within nursing homes.
Inclusion criteria for Nursing Home Staff:
Inclusion criteria for Residents:
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4 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Liza Behrens, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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