Spetz Joanne, Wagner Laura M, White Elizabeth M, Chapman Susan A, Chiong Winston, Friedman Esther M, Gerlach Lauren B, Harrison Krista L, Hunt Lauren J, Lee Soo-Jeong, Muench Ulrike, Possin Katherine, Sideman Alissa, Hickey Johanna van Tyen Silbersack, Putthinun Pongpat, Yeh Jarmin, Sandoval Sofia, Rose Amber, Rothstein Joanie, Pettit Amy R, Maust Donovan T, Zimmerman Sheryl
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
Healthforce Center at UCSF, University of California, San Francisco, California, USA.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2025 Sep 2. doi: 10.1111/jgs.70048.
The growing aging population and rising prevalence of dementia are driving increased demand for long-term care services and supports in the United States. People with dementia require substantial support and care, often from direct care workers in private homes, assisted living communities, and nursing homes. Despite their crucial role, these workers receive highly variable training, particularly in dementia care, and face significant work-related challenges including stress, injury, and burnout. The National Dementia Workforce Study (NDWS), sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, was designed to include large-scale, nationally representative annual surveys of staff and administrators providing care to individuals with dementia in home care, assisted living, and nursing homes, and of community clinicians practicing across settings. NDWS will capture workforce demographics, training adequacy, job satisfaction, and their impact on dementia care quality. This report describes NDWS's rigorous process for questionnaire design for the initial wave of home care, assisted living, and nursing home surveys. Our survey development methods integrated literature reviews, validated questionnaire items, expert consultations, and cognitive interviews to ensure instrument reliability and validity. Resulting survey data will be available to researchers seeking to examine workforce conditions, training, and worker knowledge, and their impact on care for people with dementia. NDWS infrastructure will also allow researchers to link survey responses with administrative and medical claims data to examine how workforce dynamics and organizational factors are associated with outcomes for people with dementia over time, enabling insights into policies to improve dementia care training, workforce retention, and care delivery.
在美国,人口老龄化加剧以及痴呆症患病率上升,导致对长期护理服务和支持的需求不断增加。患有痴呆症的人需要大量的支持和护理,通常由私人家庭、辅助生活社区和养老院的直接护理人员提供。尽管这些工作人员发挥着至关重要的作用,但他们接受的培训差异很大,尤其是在痴呆症护理方面,并且面临重大的工作相关挑战,包括压力、受伤和职业倦怠。由美国国立衰老研究所赞助的全国痴呆症劳动力研究(NDWS)旨在对家庭护理、辅助生活和养老院中为痴呆症患者提供护理的工作人员和管理人员,以及跨环境执业的社区临床医生进行大规模、具有全国代表性的年度调查。NDWS将获取劳动力人口统计数据、培训充足性、工作满意度及其对痴呆症护理质量的影响。本报告描述了NDWS为家庭护理、辅助生活和养老院调查的首轮问卷设计所采用的严格流程。我们的调查开发方法整合了文献综述、经过验证的问卷项目、专家咨询和认知访谈,以确保工具的可靠性和有效性。由此产生的调查数据将提供给寻求研究劳动力状况、培训和工作人员知识及其对痴呆症患者护理影响的研究人员。NDWS的基础设施还将使研究人员能够将调查回复与行政和医疗索赔数据相链接,以研究劳动力动态和组织因素如何随时间推移与痴呆症患者的结局相关联,从而深入了解改善痴呆症护理培训、劳动力保留和护理服务的政策。