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Original Articles

Positive attitudes and person-centred care predict of sense of competence in dementia care staff

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Pages 407-414 | Received 12 Nov 2014, Accepted 10 Feb 2015, Published online: 11 Mar 2015
 

Abstract

Objectives: The number of people who will require institutional care for dementia is rapidly rising. This increase raises questions about how the workforce can meet the challenge of providing quality care. A promising psychological concept that could improve staff and care recipient outcomes is staff sense of competence in their capacity to provide dementia care. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the relative importance of staff factors associated with sense of competence.

Method: Sixty-one Australian dementia care staff (mostly nurses, 69%; and allied health, 21%) were recruited. Measures included the Sense of Competence in Dementia Care Staff (criterion) and standardised measures of empirically derived predictors: training, knowledge, attitudes and person-centred care strategies.

Results: Standard multiple regression revealed that 33.9% of the variance in sense of competence was explained by the combination of the four predictors. Attitudes and person-centred strategies each uniquely explained a moderate amount of variance, while training and knowledge were not significant predictors of sense of competence.

Conclusion: A positive attitude towards people with dementia, and stronger intentions to implement person-centred care strategies, predicted a greater sense of competence to provide care, whereas knowledge and training, commonly believed to be important contributors to sense of competence in dementia care, did not predict this outcome. Investing in strategies that address staff attitude and encourage person-centred care could influence sense of competence, and by extension, dementia care.

Acknowledgements

The support and involvement of staff and participating organisations is gratefully acknowledged. Approval to undertake this research was provided by the Queensland University of Technology Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC approval no. 1400000182), and the safety of this research was assessed and certified by the university prior to its commencement.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

Funding (<$500 Australian dollars) was provided by the School of Psychology and Counselling to support this research.

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