Centre for Dementia Research, Leeds Beckett University, School of Health and Community Studies, Leeds, LS1 3HE, UK.
Centre for Applied Dementia Studies, University of Bradford, Bradford, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Jun 5;20(1):512. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-05382-4.
The health and social care workforce requires access to appropriate education and training to provide quality care for people with dementia. Success of a training programme depends on staff ability to put their learning into practice through behaviour change. This study aimed to investigate the barriers and facilitators to implementation of dementia education and training in health and social care services using the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) and COM-B model of behaviour change.
A mixed-methods design. Participants were dementia training leads, training facilitators, managers and staff who had attended training who worked in UK care homes, acute hospitals, mental health services and primary care settings. Methods were an online audit of care and training providers, online survey of trained staff and individual/group interviews with organisational training leads, training facilitators, staff who had attended dementia training and managers. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics and thematic template analysis.
Barriers and facilitators were analysed according the COM-B domains. "Capability" factors were not perceived as a significant barrier to training implementation. Factors which supported staff capability included the use of interactive face-to-face training, and training that was relevant to their role. Factors that increased staff "motivation" included skilled facilitation of training, trainees' desire to learn and the provision of incentives (e.g. attendance during paid working hours, badges/certifications). "Opportunity" factors were most prevalent with lack of resources (time, financial, staffing and environmental) being the biggest perceived barrier to training implementation. The presence or not of external support from families and internal factors such as the organisational culture and its supportiveness of good dementia care and training implementation were also influential.
A wide range of factors may present as barriers to or facilitators of dementia training implementation and behaviour change for staff. These should be considered by health and social care providers in the context of dementia training design and delivery in order to maximise potential for implementation.
卫生和社会保健工作者需要接受适当的教育和培训,为痴呆症患者提供优质护理。培训计划的成功与否取决于工作人员通过行为改变将所学知识付诸实践的能力。本研究旨在使用理论领域框架(TDF)和行为改变的 COM-B 模型,调查卫生和社会保健服务中实施痴呆症教育和培训的障碍和促进因素。
采用混合方法设计。参与者包括痴呆症培训负责人、培训师、管理人员和接受培训的工作人员,他们在英国护理院、急性医院、心理健康服务和初级保健机构工作。方法是对护理和培训提供者进行在线审计,对接受培训的工作人员进行在线调查,并对组织培训负责人、培训师、接受过痴呆症培训的工作人员和管理人员进行个人/小组访谈。使用描述性统计和主题模板分析对数据进行分析。
根据 COM-B 领域分析了障碍和促进因素。“能力”因素并未被视为培训实施的重大障碍。支持员工能力的因素包括使用互动式面对面培训,以及与他们的角色相关的培训。增加员工“动机”的因素包括培训的熟练促进、学员的学习意愿以及提供激励措施(例如在带薪工作时间内参加、徽章/认证)。“机会”因素最为普遍,资源(时间、财务、人员和环境)缺乏是培训实施的最大障碍。家庭的外部支持以及组织文化及其对良好痴呆症护理和培训实施的支持等内部因素的存在与否也具有影响力。
广泛的因素可能成为痴呆症培训实施和员工行为改变的障碍或促进因素。在设计和提供痴呆症培训时,卫生和社会保健提供者应考虑这些因素,以最大限度地提高实施的潜力。