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Making general hospitals fit for dementia care. 27 th International Conference of Alzheimer’s Disease International London 2012. Rachel Thompson RCN Dementia Advisor. Dementia …. Whose business is it?. Dementia in general hospitals: why do we need change?.
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Making general hospitals fit for dementia care 27th International Conference of Alzheimer’s Disease International London 2012 Rachel Thompson RCN Dementia Advisor
Dementia….. • Whose business is it?
Dementia in general hospitals:why do we need change? • Estimates suggest 25- 40% of people in hospital have a cognitive impairment • stay in hospital longer • have poorer outcomes • 1/3 discharged to care home • use of antipsychotic medication • poor identification and understanding of needs Counting the Cost (Alzheimer’s Society 2009)
National Audit of Dementia Care in General Hospitals 2011 • 210 hospitals across England and Wales • Enhanced audit 145 wards across 55 hospitals • 6% hospitals had dementia care pathway • 32% of staff reported ‘sufficient’ training • Very few wards demonstrated a culture which was “person-centred” • 15% of wards used colour schemes • Assessments incomplete for mental health status, nutrition, function, continence • 40% of hospitals had clear procedure for information sharing with families • Lack of consistency in the determination of staffing levels
RCN Dementia Project Sept 2010- Sept 2011 • Supported by Department of Health • Survey of practitioners : 712 responses • Survey with people with dementia and carers :1484 responses • Collaboration with external stakeholders • Development of ‘Commitment to the care for people with dementia in general hospitals’ • Resources to support delivery
Commitment to the care of people with dementia in general hospitals Join us in putting these principles into practice and make SPACE for good dementia care. SPACE – top five ingredients to support good dementia care • Staff who are skilled and have time to care. • Partnership working with carers. • Assessment and early identification of dementia. • Care plans which are person centred and individualised. • Environments that are dementia-friendly.
Benefits • reduction in falls • reduction in length of stay • improved recognition of the needs of people with dementia and their families • reduced discharge to long stay care • reduction in use of antipsychotic medications • improved management of continence • improved carer satisfaction rates and • a more confident and competent staff workforce
Learning from what works 1. Staff 2. Partnership working Dementia champions 3. Assessment and early identification 4. Care planning 5. Environments
Please visit our on- line dementia resources and obtain further information on the ‘Commitment for the care of people with dementia in general hospitals’ at: www.rcn.org.uk/dementia rachel.thompson@rcn.org.uk