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The impact of elder abuse training on subacute health providers and older adults: study protocol for a randomized control trial

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-22, 05:13 authored by MG Cavuoto, S Markusevska, C Stevens, P Reyes, G Renshaw, MDJ Peters, B Dow, P Feldman, A Gilbert, E Manias, D Mortimer, J Enticott, C Cooper, J Antoniades, B Appleton, S Nakrem, M O’Brien, J Ostaszkiewicz, M Eckert, C Durston, B Brijnath
Abstract Background Elder abuse often goes unreported and undetected. Older people may be ashamed, fearful, or otherwise reticent to disclose abuse, and many health providers are not confident in asking about it. In the No More Shame study, we will evaluate a co-designed, multi-component intervention that aims to improve health providers’ recognition, response, and referral of elder abuse. Methods This is a single-blinded, pragmatic, cluster randomised controlled trial. Ten subacute hospital sites (i.e. clusters) across Australia will be allocated 1:1, stratified by state to a multi-component intervention comprising a training programme for health providers, implementation of a screening tool and use of site champions, or no additional training or support. Outcomes will be collected at baseline, 4 and 9 months. Our co-primary outcomes are change in health providers’ knowledge of responding to elder abuse and older people’s sense of safety and quality of life. We will include all inpatients at participating sites, aged 65 + (or aged 50 + if Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander), who are able to provide informed consent and all unit staff who provide direct care to older people; a sample size of at least 92 health providers and 612 older people will provide sufficient power for primary analyses. Discussion This will be one of the first trials in the world to evaluate a multi-component elder abuse intervention. If successful, it will provide the most robust evidence base to date for health providers to draw on to create a safe environment for reporting, response, and referral. Trial registration ANZCTR, ACTRN12623000676617p. Registered 22 June 2023.

History

Journal

Trials

Volume

25

Article number

338

Pagination

338-

Location

England

ISSN

1745-6215

eISSN

1745-6215

Language

en

Publication classification

C2 Other contribution to refereed journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC