| Literature DB >> 28532475 |
Tony Foley1, Siobhán Boyle2, Aisling Jennings2, W Henry Smithson2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rising dementia prevalence rates rise combined with the policy objective of enabling people with dementia to remain living at home, means that there will be a growing demand for dementia care in the community setting. However, GPs are challenged by dementia care and have identified it as an area in which further training is needed. Previous studies of GPs dementia care educational needs have explored the views of GPs alone, without taking the perspectives of people with dementia and family carers into account. The aim of the study was to explore GPs' dementia care educational needs, as viewed from multiple perspectives, in order to inform the design and delivery of an educational programme for GPs.Entities:
Keywords: Caregivers; Dementia; General practitioner; Needs assessment; Patients
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28532475 PMCID: PMC5441069 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-017-0639-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Main interview topics for interviews with GPs
| 1. | Identifying core competencies - What a GP needs to know and do to deliver good dementia care |
| 2. | Identifying challenges and solutions - The barriers and facilitators of dementia care |
| 3. | Perceived educational need - What GPs feel they need to learn more about |
| 4. | Delivering the education - The most appropriate strategies for receiving education and training |
Main interview topics for interviews with people with dementia and with family carers
| 1. | Reflection on experience – How the GP was involved at diagnosis and as dementia progressed. |
| 2. | Identifying core competencies – The aspects of GP care which were helpful |
| 3. | Identifying challenges and solutions – The aspects of GP care which did not work well and how this might be overcome |
| 4. | Perceived educational need – The aspects of dementia care on which GPs should receive further training |
Characteristics of GPs (n = 14)
| Gender | Participants, % ( |
|---|---|
| Male | 64% (9) |
| Female | 36% (5) |
| Time Qualified | |
| < 10 years | 14% (2) |
| 11–20 years | 43% (6) |
| > 20 years | 43% (6) |
| Practice Location | |
| Rural | 14% (2) |
| Urban | 21% (3) |
| Mixed | 64% (9) |
| Type of Practice | |
| Small (1–2 GPs) | 36% (5) |
| Large (3 or more GPs) | 64% (9) |
Characteristics of family carers (n = 12)
| Gender | Participants, % ( |
|---|---|
| Female | 75% (9) |
| Male | 25% (3) |
| Relationship with PwD | |
| Wife | 25% (3) |
| Husband | 17% (2) |
| Daughter | 50% (6) |
| Son | 8% (1) |
| Living/Lived with PwD | |
| Yes | 75% (9) |
| No | 25% (3) |
Characteristics of people with dementia (n = 5)
| Gender | Participants, % ( |
|---|---|
| Female | 60% (3) |
| Male | 40% (2) |
| Age Range | |
| < 65 years | 60% (3) |
| > 65 years | 40% (2) |