ABSTRACT
Online training for care managers to identify, report, and prevent abuse, neglect, and exploitation was developed for a demonstration involving the dually eligible Medicare and Medicaid population. It was composed of three modules covering background, screening, and reporting abuse. Of 453 enrollees, 273 completed at least one module and 212 completed all three. Pre- and post-training surveys for each module were used to examine changes in the proportion of correct answers for each question, using the related-samples Cochran’s Q statistic. Improvements in knowledge from pre- to post-training were evident in modules covering background on abuse and reporting abuse, but not in the module about communication principles and screening for abuse. Its content may have already been familiar to the trainees, who were primarily social workers and nurses. Lessons learned are being used to adapt the training for a wider audience to increase public awareness of abuse.
Acknowledgments
The BRIA team would like to thank Karla Warren, Program Officer, Marc Molea, and Beverly Laubert at ODA; Ashley Bukach, Alycia Conway, Mahum Abbas, Amanda McLaughlin, Lauren Borato, and Zishan Arooj, BRIA Research Assistants; BRIA staff who pilot tested our materials; Advisory Council members; and Caryn Lanzo, Cleveland State University.
Funding
The Ohio Department of Aging (ODA) and the U.S. Administration for Community Living provided funding for this project.