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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services has awarded a University of Alabama aging expert a
$550,000 grant to study a method of reducing agitation among
nursing home residents suffering from dementia. The study is a
collaborative project with the Center for Aging at UAB.
Dr. Louis Burgio, professor of psychology and director of
UA’s Applied
Gerontology Program, will use the grant to study the
benefits of additional training for certified nursing assistants
who frequently interact with nursing home residents exhibiting
behavior problems associated with dementia. His study will focus
on residents and staff in eight Birmingham-area nursing homes.
Dementia can result in nursing home residents frequently
displaying verbal outbursts, repetitive demands and even
physically aggressive acts. Such displays are among the most
stressful problems for other nursing home residents and nursing
home staff and are also disturbing to residents’ families,
said Burgio.
“In an earlier study, we taught CNAs (certified nursing
assistants) how to identify factors in the residents’
environment that could result in disruptive behavior and
instructed them in specific behavior management and
communication techniques,” said Burgio. “We found that this
training reduced residents’ agitation during the care
interactions with the nursing assistants.
“Perhaps, most significantly, we also found that CNAs who
participated in additional training sessions designed by us and
monitored by nursing home staff maintained improved interactions
with the residents for a longer time than those not receiving
this additional type of training.”
Burgio co-authored an article detailing the earlier study
that was published in the academic journal, The Gerontologist,
in Sept. 2002. The new study, funded for a five-year period,
will refine the training methods, including using a greater
reliance on nursing home staff, rather than the researchers, as
CNA trainers.
For years, nursing home staff frequently dealt with repeated
behavior problems among residents by using physical restraints
or prescription drugs, Burgio said.
Both measures came under criticism following questions of
effectiveness and worries about restraint injuries and medicinal
side effects, Burgio said. In the early 1990s alternative forms
of treatment began to be explored and select studies of the
problem are ongoing, he said.
Teaching nursing assistants behavior management skills,
including such things as making appropriate eye contact with
residents, announcing each care task individually prior to
administering it and then pausing to see if the resident will do
it for themselves, using distraction and diversion techniques
and refraining from arguing with residents, reduced agitation
among residents in the earlier study, Burgio said.
Burgio also co-directs UA’s new Center for Mental Health
and Aging, an interdisciplinary center established earlier this
year with a $500,000 grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration, a public health agency within
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
That UA center is designed to assist in coordinating and
expanding the University’s efforts to assist the soaring
elderly population, and those who care for them, with their
mental health needs.
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