Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPeople living with dementia increasingly prefer to live in their own home as their care needs progress. Home care workers (HCWs) are essential for supporting independent living, and need training and support on how to deliver evidence‐based and best‐practice dementia care. The home care workforce is diverse, and in Australia, the number of workers who identify as culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) in 2020 represented 21% of the total direct‐care workforce.The Promoting Independence Through quality Care at Home (PITCH) project aims to improve outcomes for people living with dementia and their paid and family carers by co‐designing and testing an evidence‐based specialist training program for dementia care. A pragmatic stepped‐wedge cluster RCT is being conducted to evaluate the program. To date, 227 HCWs from seven home care providers across Australia have completed baseline measures.MethodHCWs completed the Strain in Dementia Care Scale (SDCS), Sense of Competence In Dementia Care – Staff (SCIDS), Dementia Attitudes Scale (DAS) and Dementia Knowledge Assessment Scale (DKAS). Associations between these measures was assessed using Pearson correlations. HCWs were grouped into CALD/non‐CALD groups based on self‐reported cultural background. ANOVAs examined group differences by CALD status.ResultFor the whole sample, SCIDS was correlated with DAS (r = 0.599, p<0.005) and DKAS (r = 0.257, p<0.005). DAS and DKAS were moderately correlated (r = 0.334, p<0.005). Nearly 30% of HCWs in our sample identified as CALD. The CALD group showed lower DAS, DKAS and SCIDS compared to the non‐CALD group (p’s<0.001). No differences were observed on SDCS (p = 0.58).ConclusionHCWs who were more knowledgeable about dementia had more positive attitudes toward dementia and a higher sense of competence in dementia care. HCWs who did not identify as CALD showed greater dementia knowledge, more positive dementia attitudes, and higher sense of competence in dementia care. Findings suggest that better dementia literacy supports more positive attitudes to dementia and sense of competence, and highlights that more targeted and specialized support may be beneficial for staff from CALD backgrounds (who comprise a high proportion of the Australian aged care workforce). Findings have implications for clinicians, researchers, policy‐makers, educators, and providers of dementia services.

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