American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias®

 

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First published on June 30, 2008
American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease and Other Dementias® 2008, doi:10.1177/1533317508318472


Article

Elderspeak Communication: Impact on Dementia Care

Kristine N. Williams*, Ruth Herman, Byron Gajewski, and Kristel Wilson

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kwilliams1{at}kumc.edu.


   Abstract
Resistiveness to care is common in older adults with dementia. Resistiveness to care disrupts nursing care, increasing costs of care by 30%. Elderspeak (infantilizing communication used by nursing staff) may trigger resistiveness to care in individuals with dementia. Videotaped care episodes (n = 80) of nursing home residents with dementia (n = 20) were coded for type of staff communication (normal talk and elderspeak) and subsequent resident behavior (cooperative or resistive to care). Bayesian statistical analysis tested relationships between staff communication and subsequent resident resistiveness to care. The probability of resistiveness to care varied significantly with communication (Bayes P = .0082). An increased probability of resistiveness to care occurred with elderspeak (.55, 95% CrI, .44-.66), compared with normal talk (.26, 95% CrI, .12-.44). Communication training has been shown to reduce elderspeak and may reduce resistiveness to care in future research.


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