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22nd April 2005
New training course launched to help improve dementia care
The Alzheimers
Society has launched the first nationally accredited training course
aimed at improving the quality of care given to people with dementia.
The new training
course is called An Introduction to Dementia Care and
is aimed at improving the standard of care offered to the thousands
of people across the country living with dementia. It is the first
course in dementia care to be nationally accredited and it has been
produced in collaboration with BUPA Care Homes, Joseph Rowntree
Foundation and the University of Sunderland.
The programme
aims to encourage care staff to learn more about dementia through
the use of video, group discussion and work with people with dementia.
Studies have
shown that up to 75 per cent of people living in nursing and residential
care homes have Alzheimers disease or another form of dementia.
The Alzheimers Society hopes that this course will help care
staff to have a better understanding of dementia and encourage staff
to view dementia care as a career choice.
Daren Felgate,
the Alzheimers Societys training and development manger
hopes that this course will become the key introductory course for
care workers working with people with dementia.
quoteWorking
with people with dementia is often seen as being difficult and challenging.
However, with the right support many care staff would say it is
the most rewarding work they have ever done. The Society is working
towards the goal of quality care for everyone with dementia, and
we hope that this course will go some way to improving the care
people receive.
The collaboration
between the Alzheimers Society, BUPA Care Homes, the Joseph
Rowntree Foundation and the University of Sunderland means that
staff now have the opportunity to gain university accreditation
as part of their training.
The course has
been mapped to the TOPSS (Training Organisation for the Personal
Social Services) induction standards for care staff and helps to
provide evidence for the NVQ level 2 in care.
Graham Stokes,
head of mental health at BUPA Care Homes says that the aim of the
programme is to introduce carer workers to best practice in dementia
care, provide them with an understanding of what it is like to live
with dementia and encourage them to view dementia care as a career
choice.
quoteWe also
hope that this course will go a long way in establishing a consistent
baseline for specialist training in dementia care.
The course has
already been piloted through four BUPA Care homes and the Joseph
Rowntree home in York.
The Alzheimers
Society hopes that all care providers and trainers will eventually
use the course to help improve training for care workers working
with people with dementia in residential and care homes.
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