Feasibility of the Palliative Care Education in Assisted Living Intervention for Dementia Care Providers: A Cluster Randomized Trial

Author:

Dobbs Debra1ORCID,Yauk Jessica1ORCID,Vogel Carlyn E1,Fanfan Dany2,Buck Harleah3,Haley William E1,Meng Hongdao1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Aging Studies, Florida Policy Exchange Center on Aging, University of South Florida , Tampa, Florida , USA

2. College of Nursing, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida , USA

3. College of Nursing, University of Iowa , Iowa City, Iowa , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia (ADRD) is a major cause of death in the United States. While effective interventions have been developed to deliver palliative care to nursing home residents with ADRD, little work has identified effective interventions to reach assisted living (AL) residents with dementia. Research Design and Methods One hundred and eighteen AL residents with dementia from 10 different ALs in Florida participated. A pilot study using a cluster randomized trial was conducted, with 6 sites randomized to receive a palliative care educational intervention for staff (N = 23) to deliver care to residents; 4 sites were usual care. The feasibility of the intervention was assessed by examining recruitment, retention, and treatment fidelity at 6 months. Cohen’s d statistic was used to calculate facility-level treatment effect sizes on key outcomes (documentation of advance care planning [ACP] discussions, hospice admission, and documentation of pain screening). Results The intervention proved feasible with high ratings of treatment fidelity. The intervention also demonstrated preliminary evidence for efficacy of the intervention, with effect sizes for the treatment group over 0.80 for increases in documentation of ACP discussions compared to the control group. Hospice admissions had a smaller effect size (0.16) and documentation of pain screenings had no effect. Discussion and Implications The pilot results suggest that the intervention shows promise as a resource for educating and empowering AL staff on implementing person-centered palliative care delivery to persons with dementia in AL. A larger, fully powered randomized trial is needed to test for its efficacy.

Funder

Florida Department of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

Reference46 articles.

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