| Literature DB >> 32723533 |
Sam Fazio1, Sheryl Zimmerman2, Patrick J Doyle3, Emily Shubeck4, Molly Carpenter5, Pauline Coram6, Juliet Holt Klinger7, Letitia Jackson8, Douglas Pace4, Beth Kallmyer4, Joanne Pike4.
Abstract
In April, 2019, the Alzheimer's Association Dementia Care Provider Roundtable convened to discuss common challenges faced when implementing person-centered, non-pharmacological practices in long-term care and other settings that provide care and programs for persons living with dementia, and to develop relevant, specific guidance from the perspective of administrative leaders from 23 long-term and community-based care provider organizations (representing home, community-based, and residential care). Guidance related to 5 practice areas emerged from the facilitated discussion: having a foundational person-centered culture, conceptualizing behaviors as expressions and focusing on behavioral support, identifying antecedents and placing person-centeredness before protocols, modifying training to promote person-centered culture, and valuing implementation flexibility. In developing the practice guidance, a related list of priority areas for research and policy were also identified.Entities:
Keywords: Person-centered care; behaviors; dementia care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32723533 DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2020.05.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Dir Assoc ISSN: 1525-8610 Impact factor: 4.669