Unlicensed Caregiver Experience in Dementia Care
Dementia Care
Nearly 5.4 million people in the United States suffer from Alzheimer's disease, the most common form of dementia (Chodosh et al., 2012, p. 85). The health care burden this places on nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and hospices is significant, especially since some dementia sufferers exhibit disruptive and sometimes dangerous behaviors. These behaviors include verbal and physical aggression, wandering, restlessness, insomnia, irritability, and repetitive vocalizations (McKenzie, Teri, Pike, LaFazia, and van Leynseele, 2012, p. 96). Nearly 1 million Americans currently reside in assisted living facilities and an estimated 45 to 67% suffer from dementia. Of these, 34 to 56% exhibit behavioral problems.
The impact of dementia care on professional caregivers is therefore significant, especially when dealing with patients with more advanced forms of the disease. Early studies suggest that dementia care training can have a positive impact on both the patient's health and the care experience of professional caregivers (McKenzie, Teri, Pike, LaFazia, and van Leynseele, 2012, p. 96-97), but the bulk of the care burden in these facilities falls on the shoulders of unlicensed staff. With a resident to staff ratio of 14 to 1 in assisted living facilities, a lack of dementia care training for unlicensed caregivers (ULC) is predicted to contribute significantly to poor morale, high turnover, and reduced care quality.
Towards the goal of improving dementia care in assisted living facilities, McKenzie and colleagues (2012) investigated the reactions of ULC to dementia...
Program Budget and Cost Analysis Line-Item Budget for an in-Service Dementia Care Training Program Florida now requires all direct-care staff working with dementia patients to receive specialized training. The curricula offered must be vetted by the Training Academy of the University of South Florida's Policy Exchange Center on Aging, otherwise assisted living facilities, nursing homes, adult day care, and hospices will be unable to accept patients with dementia into their facilities. In
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