Abstract

BackgroundThe health and social care workforce requires access to appropriate education and training to provide quality care for people with dementia. Success of a training programme depends on staff ability to put their learning into practice through behaviour change. This study aimed to investigate the barriers and facilitators to implementation of dementia education and training in health and social care services using the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) and COM-B model of behaviour change.MethodsA mixed-methods design. Participants were dementia training leads, training facilitators, managers and staff who had attended training who worked in UK care homes, acute hospitals, mental health services and primary care settings. Methods were an online audit of care and training providers, online survey of trained staff and individual/group interviews with organisational training leads, training facilitators, staff who had attended dementia training and managers. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics and thematic template analysis.ResultsBarriers and facilitators were analysed according the COM-B domains. “Capability” factors were not perceived as a significant barrier to training implementation. Factors which supported staff capability included the use of interactive face-to-face training, and training that was relevant to their role. Factors that increased staff “motivation” included skilled facilitation of training, trainees’ desire to learn and the provision of incentives (e.g. attendance during paid working hours, badges/certifications). “Opportunity” factors were most prevalent with lack of resources (time, financial, staffing and environmental) being the biggest perceived barrier to training implementation. The presence or not of external support from families and internal factors such as the organisational culture and its supportiveness of good dementia care and training implementation were also influential.ConclusionsA wide range of factors may present as barriers to or facilitators of dementia training implementation and behaviour change for staff. These should be considered by health and social care providers in the context of dementia training design and delivery in order to maximise potential for implementation.

Highlights

  • The health and social care workforce requires access to appropriate education and training to provide quality care for people with dementia

  • Research indicates that education alone is not enough to lead to staff behaviour change and the transfer of learning into daily practice [4]

  • This paper aims to utilise the What Works? study data from across these sources to explore the barriers and facilitators to effective dementia education and training implementation in health and social care settings, in the context of the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) and COM-B model

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Summary

Introduction

The health and social care workforce requires access to appropriate education and training to provide quality care for people with dementia. This study aimed to investigate the barriers and facilitators to implementation of dementia education and training in health and social care services using the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) and COM-B model of behaviour change. While there is an expansive literature on development and efficacy of dementia education and training interventions [3], there remains limited evidence about the barriers and facilitators to implementing learning in practice. Few studies have considered systematically the barriers and facilitators to implementing dementia training and staff behaviour change, and none have examined commonalities over a range of setting types, services and training programmes. The studies that have explored this area identify organisational and service factors such as peer support, mentorship and supervision [5, 6], alignment of the training with the organisation’s care culture and senior/leadership support [7] as important facilitators for effective training

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