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A process evaluation of the NIDUS-Professional dementia training intervention for UK homecare workers

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posted on 2024-07-01, 03:59 authored by D Kelleher, K Windle, R Randell, K Lord, L Duffy, A Akhtar, J Budgett, S Zabihi, S Banks, P Rapaport, T Lee, J Barber, V Orgeta, J Manthorpe, K Walters, K Rockwood, B Dow, J Hoe, S Banerjee, C Cooper
Abstract Introduction This process evaluation was conducted in parallel to the randomised controlled feasibility trial of NIDUS-Professional, a manualised remote dementia training intervention for homecare workers (HCWs), delivered alongside an individualised intervention for clients living with dementia and their family carers (NIDUS-Family). The process evaluation reports on: (i) intervention reach, dose and fidelity; (ii) contexts influencing agency engagement and (iii) alignment of findings with theoretical assumptions about how the intervention might produce change. Methods We report proportions of eligible HCWs receiving any intervention (reach), number of sessions attended (dose; attending ≥4/6 main sessions was predefined as adhering), intervention fidelity and adherence of clients and carers to NIDUS-Family (attending all 6–8 planned sessions). We interviewed HCWs, managers, family carers and facilitators. We integrated and thematically analysed, at the homecare agency level, qualitative interview and intervention recording data. Results 32/141 (23%) of eligible HCWs and 7/42 (17%) of family carers received any intervention; most who did adhered to the intervention (89% and 71%). Intervention fidelity was high. We analysed interviews with 20/44 HCWs, 3/4 managers and 3/7 family carers, as well as intervention recordings involving 32/44 HCWs. All agencies reported structural challenges in supporting intervention delivery. Agencies with greater management buy-in had higher dose and reach. HCWs valued NIDUS-Professional for enabling group reflection and peer support, providing practical, actionable care strategies and increasing their confidence as practitioners. Conclusion NIDUS-Professional was valued by HCWs. Agency management, culture and priorities were key barriers to implementation; we discuss how to address these in a future trial.

History

Journal

Age and Ageing

Volume

53

Article number

afae109

Pagination

1-10

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0002-0729

eISSN

1468-2834

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

Oxford University Press