Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundTraditional healthcare education typically focuses on short block clinical placements based on acute care, investigations and technical aspects of diagnosis and treatment. It may therefore fail to build the understanding, compassion and person‐centred empathy needed to help those with long‐term conditions, like dementia. Time for Dementia was developed to address this.MethodParallel group comparison of two cohorts of UK medical students from universities, one participating in Time for Dementia (intervention group) and one not (control group). In Time for Dementia students visit a person with dementia and their family in pairs for 2 hours three times a year for 2 years, the control group received their normal curriculum.ResultsIn an adjusted multilevel model (intervention group n = 274, control n = 112), there was strong evidence supporting improvements for Time for Dementia participants in: total Approaches to Dementia Questionnaire score (coefficient: 2.19, p = 0.003) and its person‐centredness subscale (1.32, p = 0.006) and weaker evidence in its hopefulness subscale (0.78, p = 0.070). There was also strong evidence of improvement in the Dementia Knowledge Questionnaire (1.63, p < 0.001) and Dementia Attitudes Scale (total score: 6.55, p < 0.001; social comfort subscale: 4.15, p < 0.001; dementia knowledge subscale: 3.38, p = 0.001) scores. No differences were observed on the Alzheimer's Disease Knowledge Scale, the Medical Condition Regard Scale or the Jefferson Scale of Empathy.DiscussionTime for Dementia may help improve the attitudes of medical students towards dementia promoting a person‐centred approach and increasing social comfort. Such patient‐focused programmes may be a useful complement to traditional medical education.

Highlights

  • Traditional healthcare education, for medical students, is typically based around short (6–8 week) block clinical placements often in acute settings and less frequently in primary or community care

  • Traditional healthcare education with its acute care focus may fail to build the understanding, compassion and person‐centred empathy needed to help those with long‐term conditions, such as dementia

  • This may work for acute illness and trauma, but the dominance of this approach has been questioned for long‐term conditions such as dementia.[1,2]

Read more

Summary

Key points

Traditional healthcare education with its acute care focus may fail to build the understanding, compassion and person‐centred empathy needed to help those with long‐term conditions, such as dementia. This evaluation provides proof of concept evidence that the Time for Dementia programme where students visit a person with dementia and their family in pairs for 2 hours every term for 2 years, can be made a core part of the curriculum at medical schools; the people with dementia and their carers visited are the teachers/mentors in this relationship. Its effectiveness in other healthcare student groups warrants study This longitudinal approach might be of value in building positive attitudes and understanding for other marginalised patient groups

| INTRODUCTION
| Study design
| Participants and consent
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call