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Dementia
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Staff-based measures of individualized care for persons with dementia in long-term care facilities

Neena L. Chappell

University of Victoria, Canada, nlc{at}uvic.ca

R. Colin Reid

University of British Columbia, Okanagan, Canada, colin.reid{at}ubc.ca

Jessica A. Gish

University of Calgary, Canada, jagish{at}ucalgary.ca

Although individualized care for persons with dementia in long-term care institutions has become accepted as best practice, there have not been easy-to-use, multi-item reliable measures of the concept for scientific research or for administrative use. Following review of the literature, consultation with experts in the field, and direct observation within long-term care facilities, three domains of individualized care (knowing the person/resident, resident autonomy and choice, communication — staff-to-staff and staff-to-resident) were chosen as appropriate for the development of multi-item paper-and-pencil staff completion scales. These scales are presented in this article, including, where appropriate, shorter scales derived from factor analyses. The findings suggest that these domains of individualized care lend themselves to brief multi-item measures and that not all conceptual domains of individualized care co-occur in practice. Further, supplemental staff training in individualized care practice may be warranted.

Key Words: best practices • care aides • dementia care • instrument development • long-term institutional care • nursing home care

Dementia, Vol. 6, No. 4, 527-547 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1471301207084372


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