A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study

Background: Twenty-five per cent of hospital beds are occupied by a person living with dementia. Dementia affects expressive communication and understanding. Health-care professionals report a lack of communication skills training. Objectives: To identify teachable, effective strategies for communic...

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Main Authors: Rowan H Harwood, Rebecca O’Brien, Sarah E Goldberg, Rebecca Allwood, Alison Pilnick, Suzanne Beeke, Louise Thomson, Megan Murray, Ruth Parry, Fiona Kearney, Bryn Baxendale, Kate Sartain, Justine Schneider
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: NIHR Journals Library 2018-12-01
Series:Health Services and Delivery Research
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3310/hsdr06410
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author Rowan H Harwood
Rebecca O’Brien
Sarah E Goldberg
Rebecca Allwood
Alison Pilnick
Suzanne Beeke
Louise Thomson
Megan Murray
Ruth Parry
Fiona Kearney
Bryn Baxendale
Kate Sartain
Justine Schneider
spellingShingle Rowan H Harwood
Rebecca O’Brien
Sarah E Goldberg
Rebecca Allwood
Alison Pilnick
Suzanne Beeke
Louise Thomson
Megan Murray
Ruth Parry
Fiona Kearney
Bryn Baxendale
Kate Sartain
Justine Schneider
A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study
Health Services and Delivery Research
author_facet Rowan H Harwood
Rebecca O’Brien
Sarah E Goldberg
Rebecca Allwood
Alison Pilnick
Suzanne Beeke
Louise Thomson
Megan Murray
Ruth Parry
Fiona Kearney
Bryn Baxendale
Kate Sartain
Justine Schneider
author_sort Rowan H Harwood
title A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study
title_short A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study
title_full A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study
title_fullStr A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study
title_full_unstemmed A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation study
title_sort staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the voice mixed-methods development and evaluation study
publisher NIHR Journals Library
series Health Services and Delivery Research
issn 2050-4349
2050-4357
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Background: Twenty-five per cent of hospital beds are occupied by a person living with dementia. Dementia affects expressive communication and understanding. Health-care professionals report a lack of communication skills training. Objectives: To identify teachable, effective strategies for communication between health-care professionals and people living with dementia, and to develop and evaluate a communication skills training course. Design: We undertook a systematic literature review, video-recorded 41 encounters between staff and people with dementia, and used conversation analysis to investigate communication problems and solutions. We designed a communication skills training course using coproduction and multiple pedagogic approaches. We ran a pilot, followed by six courses for health-care professionals. We measured knowledge, confidence and communication behaviours before, immediately after and 1 month after the course, and undertook interviews with participants and managers. Behaviours were measured using blind-rated videos of simulations. Setting: General hospital acute geriatric medical wards and two hospital clinical skills centres. Participants: We video-recorded 26 people with dementia and 26 professionals. Ten experts in dementia care, education, simulation and communication contributed to intervention development. Six health-care professionals took part in a pilot course, and 45 took part in the training. Results: The literature review identified 26 studies describing 10 communication strategies, with modest evidence of effectiveness. Health-care professional-initiated encounters followed a predictable phase structure. Problems were apparent in requests (with frequent refusals) and in closings. Success was more likely when requests were made directly, with high entitlement (authority to ask) and with lowered contingencies (made to sound less difficult, by minimising the extent or duration of the task, asking patients ‘to try’, offering help or proposing collaborative action). Closings were more successful if the health-care professional announced the end of the task, made a specific arrangement, body language matched talk, and through use of ‘closing idioms’. The training course comprised 2 days, 1 month apart, using experiential learning, including lectures, video workshops, small group discussions, simulations (with specially trained actors) and reflections. We emphasised the incorporation of previous expertise and commitment to person-centred care. Forty-four participants returned for the second training day and 43 provided complete evaluation data. Knowledge and confidence both increased. Some behaviours, especially relating to closings, were more commonly used after training. The course was rated highly in interviews, especially the use of simulations, real-life video clips and interdisciplinary learning. Participants reported that they found the methods useful in practice and were using them 1 month after the course finished. Limitations: Data were from people with moderate to severe dementia, in an acute hospital, during health-care professional-initiated interactions. Analysis was limited to problems and solutions that were likely to be ‘trainable’. Actors required careful preparation to simulate people with dementia. Communication skills training course participants were volunteers, unlikely to be representative of the general workforce, who displayed high levels of baseline knowledge, confidence and skills. Before-and-after evaluations, and qualitative interviews, are prone to bias. Conclusions: Requests and closings pose particular difficulties for professionals communicating with people with dementia. We identified solutions to these problems and incorporated them into communication skills training, which improved knowledge, confidence and some communication behaviours. Simulation was an effective training modality. Future work: Further research should investigate a wider range of health, social care and family carers. Conversation analysis should be used to investigate other aspects of health-care communication. Study registration: The systematic literature review is registered as CRD42015023437. Funding: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
url https://doi.org/10.3310/hsdr06410
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spelling doaj-2cb808ba328e486d9c7ea5aa1020f5662020-11-25T00:21:14ZengNIHR Journals LibraryHealth Services and Delivery Research2050-43492050-43572018-12-0164110.3310/hsdr0641013/114/93A staff training intervention to improve communication between people living with dementia and health-care professionals in hospital: the VOICE mixed-methods development and evaluation studyRowan H Harwood0Rebecca O’Brien1Sarah E Goldberg2Rebecca Allwood3Alison Pilnick4Suzanne Beeke5Louise Thomson6Megan Murray7Ruth Parry8Fiona Kearney9Bryn Baxendale10Kate Sartain11Justine Schneider12Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UKSchool of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKSchool of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKSchool of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKSchool of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKLanguage and Cognition Research, University College London, London, UKInstitute of Mental Health, Division of Psychiatry and Applied Psychology, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKTrent Simulation and Clinical Skills Centre, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UKSchool of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKNottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UKNottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UKPatient and Public Contributor, Division of Rehabilitation and Ageing, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKSchool of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UKBackground: Twenty-five per cent of hospital beds are occupied by a person living with dementia. Dementia affects expressive communication and understanding. Health-care professionals report a lack of communication skills training. Objectives: To identify teachable, effective strategies for communication between health-care professionals and people living with dementia, and to develop and evaluate a communication skills training course. Design: We undertook a systematic literature review, video-recorded 41 encounters between staff and people with dementia, and used conversation analysis to investigate communication problems and solutions. We designed a communication skills training course using coproduction and multiple pedagogic approaches. We ran a pilot, followed by six courses for health-care professionals. We measured knowledge, confidence and communication behaviours before, immediately after and 1 month after the course, and undertook interviews with participants and managers. Behaviours were measured using blind-rated videos of simulations. Setting: General hospital acute geriatric medical wards and two hospital clinical skills centres. Participants: We video-recorded 26 people with dementia and 26 professionals. Ten experts in dementia care, education, simulation and communication contributed to intervention development. Six health-care professionals took part in a pilot course, and 45 took part in the training. Results: The literature review identified 26 studies describing 10 communication strategies, with modest evidence of effectiveness. Health-care professional-initiated encounters followed a predictable phase structure. Problems were apparent in requests (with frequent refusals) and in closings. Success was more likely when requests were made directly, with high entitlement (authority to ask) and with lowered contingencies (made to sound less difficult, by minimising the extent or duration of the task, asking patients ‘to try’, offering help or proposing collaborative action). Closings were more successful if the health-care professional announced the end of the task, made a specific arrangement, body language matched talk, and through use of ‘closing idioms’. The training course comprised 2 days, 1 month apart, using experiential learning, including lectures, video workshops, small group discussions, simulations (with specially trained actors) and reflections. We emphasised the incorporation of previous expertise and commitment to person-centred care. Forty-four participants returned for the second training day and 43 provided complete evaluation data. Knowledge and confidence both increased. Some behaviours, especially relating to closings, were more commonly used after training. The course was rated highly in interviews, especially the use of simulations, real-life video clips and interdisciplinary learning. Participants reported that they found the methods useful in practice and were using them 1 month after the course finished. Limitations: Data were from people with moderate to severe dementia, in an acute hospital, during health-care professional-initiated interactions. Analysis was limited to problems and solutions that were likely to be ‘trainable’. Actors required careful preparation to simulate people with dementia. Communication skills training course participants were volunteers, unlikely to be representative of the general workforce, who displayed high levels of baseline knowledge, confidence and skills. Before-and-after evaluations, and qualitative interviews, are prone to bias. Conclusions: Requests and closings pose particular difficulties for professionals communicating with people with dementia. We identified solutions to these problems and incorporated them into communication skills training, which improved knowledge, confidence and some communication behaviours. Simulation was an effective training modality. Future work: Further research should investigate a wider range of health, social care and family carers. Conversation analysis should be used to investigate other aspects of health-care communication. Study registration: The systematic literature review is registered as CRD42015023437. Funding: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.https://doi.org/10.3310/hsdr06410