![]() Process-based costing will be used to determine costs for app use in NHs and other long-term service and support settings.Ĭosts will be compared in relation to each group's outcomes. Hypothesis: Staff who use the app will find it acceptable and beneficial for their practice. Hypothesis: Staff who receive immediate app feedback (N= 30 in three NHs) will have greater elderspeak reduction after completing CHATO training compared to delayed feedback controls (N= 30 in three NHs). Test preliminary effects of an innovative self-monitoring feedback app on staff elderspeak use and compare accuracy to psycholinguistic analyses of audio-recorded staff communication. Hypothesis: The app will be readily used and acceptable to CNAs.ĭiminutive counts determined by the app will be correlated with psycholinguistic analysis, validating accuracy. Demonstrate feasibility, acceptability, and validity of the SPEEKO for Elderspeak feedback app use by staff in the NH.įive certified nursing assistants (CNAs) will use the app during NH care and provide feedback about any needed modifications. Next, a clinical trial (N= 6NHs) will be conducted to test preliminary efficacy of the app for amplifying reductions in diminutives use for NH staff completing the CHATO training. The PI and colleagues developed the SPEEKO for Elderspeak app using archived NH recordings from previous research to identify the most commonly used diminutives and then to develop algorithms to detect them in speech.īuilding on proof of concept established in the laboratory, the app will demonstrate feasibility at the point-of-care. This study will test feasibility and preliminary effects of an automated and performance-based feedback app that detects and reports the use of diminutives (terms of endearment such as honey, dearie, and sweetie) which are prevalent elderspeak terms linked to BPSD. However, feasibility and costs for individualized expert feedback in NH settings are usually prohibitive and thus not widely used in practice. Performance-based reinforcement of skills is effective in achieving greater immediate implementation and long-term maintenance of new skills use in practice. Recognizing the delay and incomplete adoption and application of evidence-based skills in practice, the PI and colleagues believe additional strategies to optimize CHATO skills implementation are indicated. To facilitate dissemination, interactive online CHAT modules have been developed (CHATO) which provides the same CHAT classroom content with the advantage of flexible access via the internet for busy NH staff, including those in rural areas and small, independent NHs. The subsequent CHAT R01 trial verified that staff reduced their use of elderspeak after attending the three-session Changing Talk (CHAT) communication training program, and that this reduced RTC. The R03 study established that residents with dementia are more than twice as likely to exhibit BPSD (measured by coding RTC behavior in videos) when staff use elderspeak instead of normal adult communication. ![]() The PI and other researchers have empirically verified that RTC occurs when NH staff use elderspeak (speech similar to baby talk) that features inappropriately intimate terms of endearment (diminutives such as "honey"), belittling pronoun substitutions that imply dependence ("the investigators" need a bath), and harsh task-oriented commands ("sit down").Įlderspeak conveys a message of disrespect and incompetence to residents who react with withdrawal or BPSD. A new person is diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease or other dementia every 66 seconds, and most persons with dementia (PWD) spend the late stages of dementia in nursing homes (NHs) where lack of dementia care skills and staff shortages limit quality of care.Ĭare of PWD in NHs is complicated by behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) such as aggression, vocal outbursts, wandering, and withdrawal that occur as PWD lose cognitive and communication abilities and cannot express their unmet physical and psychosocial needs.īPSD present to NH staff as resistiveness to care (RTC) that increases staff stress and costly time to complete care, often leading to staff turnover, injury, and inappropriate use of psychotropic medications to control BPSD.Īlthough Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) mandates and penalties have reduced antipsychotic medication use slightly, contraindicated use in NH residents remains a pervasive problem, causing harmful side effects and reducing the quality of life for PWD.
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