Why we need to care about the care: A longitudinal study linking the quality of residential dementia care to residents’ quality of life

Katrina Anderson*, Annaliese Blair

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    11 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background: Residential dementia care staff are often the most important people in a resident's social world. It is a symbiotic relationship and the work can involve highly emotional interactions as well as physical and technical demands. This study focused on narrowing down the most useful targets for intervention in quality of care (QOC) in order to improve quality of life (QOL) for people with dementia in residential care. Method: Over six months we followed: 247 older adults with dementia from 12 residential care facilities, their families/care partners (n = 225), managers (n = 12) and staff (n = 232). Facilities ranged from 10 to 137 beds, located across remote, rural and metropolitan areas. Measures: Staff surveys, family member and resident interviews, resident file audits, live resident and staff observations and organisational audits. Results: The QOC provided had an immediate impact on resident's pain, depression, QOL scale score, Body Mass Index, ease/engagement with staff, and food and fluid intake. This influence was still evident six months later, with baseline QOC leading to improved ease and engagement with staff, QOL scores, and fluid intake. Restraint use featured heavily as a predictor of poor outcomes for residents. QOC did not significantly impact agitated behaviours, frailty, nor physical/verbal expressions of well-being. Conclusions: What staff do and the way they do it has a real and lasting impact on the QOL of residents. The most useful targets for improving QOL are: eradicating physical restraint and supporting and upskilling care staff so that they treat and interact empathetically and humanely with residents.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number104226
    JournalArchives of Gerontology and Geriatrics
    Volume91
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2020

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