Curtin University-led research has demonstrated the benefits of a new tool to improve communication between hospital staff and people with dementia.
The research, published in the international peer-reviewed journal Dementia, tested the feasibility of a new communication form that could be used by carers of people with dementia and hospital staff during a hospital visit.
The form listed questions that covered a person’s daily routines including sleep patterns, meals, medications, favourite foods, as well as information about their toilet habits, vision or hearing ability, previous falls, pain, previous experiences in hospital and what might agitate or stress them.
Lead author of the paper, Dr Elissa Burton, from the School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science at Curtin University, said the research aimed to reduce the communication gap experienced by many families of people with dementia and hospital staff.
Dr Burton said it was important to find new ways to relieve pressure on the carer to stay with the patient for the entire duration of their hospital stay.
“Through this research, we conducted a pilot study into the use of ‘Focus on the Person’ form to prevent carers of people with dementia from having to continually provide the same information to a constantly changing procession of healthcare staff,” Dr Burton said.
“The form provides the person’s usual routines and preferences, addressing identified areas of clinical risk in a simple format that can be quickly read by busy hospital staff.
“The carers and staff involved in the research all agreed the form would be beneficial, but it will require hospital processes to be put in place to ensure the appropriate use of the information provided by carers before it can be widely introduced to hospitals.”
The study was funded by the Australian Dementia Collaborative Research Centre: Carers and Consumers and Curtin University.
The research involved a team from Curtin and Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital working with a reference group including family carers of people with dementia. The research project and the reference group was led by Associate Professor Chris Toye, from the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Paramedicine at Curtin University.
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