Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff

Care for the person with dementia requires understanding of the person’s perspective and preferences, integrated with knowledge of dementia’s trajectory and appropriate care. Version One of the Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool addressed such knowledge in care workers; Version Two is for families a...

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Main Authors: Toye, Christine, Lester, Leanne, Popescu, Aurora, McInerney, Fran, Andrews, S., Robinson, Andrew
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications Ltd. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25222
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author Toye, Christine
Lester, Leanne
Popescu, Aurora
McInerney, Fran
Andrews, S.
Robinson, Andrew
author_facet Toye, Christine
Lester, Leanne
Popescu, Aurora
McInerney, Fran
Andrews, S.
Robinson, Andrew
author_sort Toye, Christine
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Care for the person with dementia requires understanding of the person’s perspective and preferences, integrated with knowledge of dementia’s trajectory and appropriate care. Version One of the Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool addressed such knowledge in care workers; Version Two is for families as well as staff. Content validity was established during development. Revisions addressed clarity, time for completion, and reliability. When 671 staff completed Version One before an education intervention, internal consistency reliability estimates exceeded 0.70. Validity was supported by higher scores in professional versus nonprofessional staff and following the education. Version Two was used with 34 family carers and 70 staff members. Internal consistency reliability (Cronbach’s alpha coefficient) was promising (0.79, both groups). Completion was within 15 minutes. Median correct responses (from 21) were 14 for families (range 4–20) and 16 for the staff (range 3–21). Eighteen staff members (26%) and two family carers (6%) reported substantive dementia education. Inclusion of the person with dementia in care planning is often limited because of a late diagnosis and the progressive impacts of the condition. Establishing a shared staff–family understanding of the dementia trajectory and care strategies likely to be helpful is therefore critical to embarking upon the development and implementation of collaborative long term and end-of-life care plans. Version Two can help establish needs for, and outcomes of, education programs and informational resources in a way that is feasible, minimises burden, and facilitates comparisons across family and staff carer groups.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-252222017-09-13T15:49:10Z Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff Toye, Christine Lester, Leanne Popescu, Aurora McInerney, Fran Andrews, S. Robinson, Andrew health knowledge health services for the aged Dementia reliability and validity questionnaires Care for the person with dementia requires understanding of the person’s perspective and preferences, integrated with knowledge of dementia’s trajectory and appropriate care. Version One of the Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool addressed such knowledge in care workers; Version Two is for families as well as staff. Content validity was established during development. Revisions addressed clarity, time for completion, and reliability. When 671 staff completed Version One before an education intervention, internal consistency reliability estimates exceeded 0.70. Validity was supported by higher scores in professional versus nonprofessional staff and following the education. Version Two was used with 34 family carers and 70 staff members. Internal consistency reliability (Cronbach’s alpha coefficient) was promising (0.79, both groups). Completion was within 15 minutes. Median correct responses (from 21) were 14 for families (range 4–20) and 16 for the staff (range 3–21). Eighteen staff members (26%) and two family carers (6%) reported substantive dementia education. Inclusion of the person with dementia in care planning is often limited because of a late diagnosis and the progressive impacts of the condition. Establishing a shared staff–family understanding of the dementia trajectory and care strategies likely to be helpful is therefore critical to embarking upon the development and implementation of collaborative long term and end-of-life care plans. Version Two can help establish needs for, and outcomes of, education programs and informational resources in a way that is feasible, minimises burden, and facilitates comparisons across family and staff carer groups. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25222 10.1177/1471301212471960 Sage Publications Ltd. fulltext
spellingShingle health knowledge
health services for the aged
Dementia
reliability and validity
questionnaires
Toye, Christine
Lester, Leanne
Popescu, Aurora
McInerney, Fran
Andrews, S.
Robinson, Andrew
Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
title Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
title_full Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
title_fullStr Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
title_full_unstemmed Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
title_short Dementia Knowledge Assessment Tool Version Two: Development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
title_sort dementia knowledge assessment tool version two: development of a tool to inform preparation for care planning and delivery in families and care staff
topic health knowledge
health services for the aged
Dementia
reliability and validity
questionnaires
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25222