Abstract

Purpose. Researchers assessed whether medical students' participation in a poetry workshop with people with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) affected their attitudes towards persons with ADRD. Objective. To add to the growing body of research summarizing the impact of nonclinical interventions on medical students' perspectives about people with ADRD. Design. Researchers used dementia attitudes scale (DAS) and interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) to analyze participants' attitudes. Setting. Osteopathic medical school and dementia care unit in the state of New Jersey. Participants. Eleven out of fourteen medical students completed the study. Measurements. Emerging themes were classified from the postintervention semistructured interviews and descriptive statistics were used to compare the preintervention to postintervention DAS. Results. Researchers found statistically significant differences between preintervention and postintervention DAS scores. Study participants scored a preintervention DAS mean, 107.09 (SD = 11.85), that changed positively and significantly to the postintervention DAS mean, 121.82 (SD = 10.38). DAS subdomains, “comfort” (P = 0.002) and “knowledge” (P = 0.01), and eleven of the twenty DAS items underwent a positive and statistically significant shift from preintervention to postintervention. IPA of the interviews yielded five primary and five secondary themes, supporting the measured statistical outcomes. Conclusion. Medical students' participation in a poetry workshop, with people with ADRD, positively impacts their attitudes.

Highlights

  • The Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study (ADAMS) currently estimates that 14 percent of people aged 71 and older in the United States have dementia [1]

  • O’Connor and McFadden when developing the dementia attitudes scale (DAS) found that individuals with ADRD family members may score higher at preintervention level [17]

  • Delving deeper into the mean DAS score data set, the present pilot study examined whether or not DAS responses of Rowan medical students with family members affected by ADRD (4 out of participants) showed significant variance from the students without family members affected by ADRD (7 out of participants)

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Summary

Introduction

The Aging, Demographics, and Memory Study (ADAMS) currently estimates that 14 percent of people aged 71 and older in the United States have dementia [1]. An estimated 5.2 million Americans have Alzheimer’s disease. The number of people aged 65 and older living with Alzheimer’s disease is expected to nearly triple by 2050 [2]. Research estimates that about one-third of general practitioners find the clinical management of dementia difficult [3]. The future of dementia care lies in the hands of medical students. Many medical students find the complexities of older people’s medical problems, including dementia, overwhelming [4, 5]

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