Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments

This project provides the first comprehensive investigation into the experiences of people with dementia (PWD), their carers, and the staff who provide care in emergency departments (ED) in the UK. This is a mixed methods study which used a national survey (N=403) followed by ED observation (32...

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Main Author: Shaw, Courtney J.
Other Authors: Armitage, Gerry R.
Language:en
Published: University of Bradford 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17445
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-174452019-11-16T03:09:29Z Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments Shaw, Courtney J. Armitage, Gerry R. Capstick, Andrea Dementia Emergency medicine Patient safety Quality improvement Contributory factors Person centred course Nurses Doctors Carers Patients This project provides the first comprehensive investigation into the experiences of people with dementia (PWD), their carers, and the staff who provide care in emergency departments (ED) in the UK. This is a mixed methods study which used a national survey (N=403) followed by ED observation (32 hours) and qualitative interviews with health professionals (N=29), in an iterative and sequential design to present a holistic evaluation of the current experiences of the key parties- patients, carers, and ED staff involved in receiving and providing care. The theoretical perspective of the Human Factors Approach to patient safety underpins this work. The project included people with dementia and carers as collaborators and co-designers in both the development of the research tools and in shaping the project outputs. This research explores the barriers and facilitators to safe and effective care, concluding that here are a number of barriers (poor integration of communication systems, inappropriate physical environments, misalignment of staff training and workplace staffing models), which may affect the healthcare team’s ability to provide effective dementia care. These systemic challenges both give rise to and exacerbate poor organisational and safety cultures. However, despite these challenges, there are examples of safe and effective care (positive deviants) where uncommonly good outcomes for this patient population are achieved. Examining these examples offers valuable insight into potential adaptions, which could be used to improve existing care. 2019-11-14T12:59:10Z 2019-11-14T12:59:10Z 2018 Thesis doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17445 en <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"><img alt="Creative Commons License" style="border-width:0" src="http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by-nc-nd/3.0/88x31.png" /></a><br />The University of Bradford theses are licenced under a <a rel="license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Licence</a>. University of Bradford University of Bradford Faculty of Health Studies
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Dementia
Emergency medicine
Patient safety
Quality improvement
Contributory factors
Person centred course
Nurses
Doctors
Carers
Patients
spellingShingle Dementia
Emergency medicine
Patient safety
Quality improvement
Contributory factors
Person centred course
Nurses
Doctors
Carers
Patients
Shaw, Courtney J.
Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
description This project provides the first comprehensive investigation into the experiences of people with dementia (PWD), their carers, and the staff who provide care in emergency departments (ED) in the UK. This is a mixed methods study which used a national survey (N=403) followed by ED observation (32 hours) and qualitative interviews with health professionals (N=29), in an iterative and sequential design to present a holistic evaluation of the current experiences of the key parties- patients, carers, and ED staff involved in receiving and providing care. The theoretical perspective of the Human Factors Approach to patient safety underpins this work. The project included people with dementia and carers as collaborators and co-designers in both the development of the research tools and in shaping the project outputs. This research explores the barriers and facilitators to safe and effective care, concluding that here are a number of barriers (poor integration of communication systems, inappropriate physical environments, misalignment of staff training and workplace staffing models), which may affect the healthcare team’s ability to provide effective dementia care. These systemic challenges both give rise to and exacerbate poor organisational and safety cultures. However, despite these challenges, there are examples of safe and effective care (positive deviants) where uncommonly good outcomes for this patient population are achieved. Examining these examples offers valuable insight into potential adaptions, which could be used to improve existing care.
author2 Armitage, Gerry R.
author_facet Armitage, Gerry R.
Shaw, Courtney J.
author Shaw, Courtney J.
author_sort Shaw, Courtney J.
title Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
title_short Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
title_full Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
title_fullStr Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
title_full_unstemmed Towards Dementia Friendly Emergency Departments: A mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
title_sort towards dementia friendly emergency departments: a mixed method exploratory study identifying opportunities to improve the quality and safety of care for people with dementia in emergency departments
publisher University of Bradford
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17445
work_keys_str_mv AT shawcourtneyj towardsdementiafriendlyemergencydepartmentsamixedmethodexploratorystudyidentifyingopportunitiestoimprovethequalityandsafetyofcareforpeoplewithdementiainemergencydepartments
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