The role of the dementia specialist nurse in acute care: a scoping review
The role of the dementia specialist nurse in acute care: a scoping review
Aims and objectives
To identify the potential benefits of dementia specialist nursing and to inform the implementation of roles to support people with dementia during hospital admission.
Background
Extended stays and adverse events mean that hospital admissions are costly for people with dementia, and patient experiences and outcomes can be poor. Specialist nurses have been identified as having potential to enhance care quality, reduce excess stays and reduce costs, but the evidence base for dementia specialist nurse roles has not previously been synthesised.
Design
Scoping review.
Data sources
Cochrane Library, Campbell Collaboration, Clinical Evidence, Evidence-Based Medicine, York Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, PubMed, Medline, CINAHL and PsycInfo databases and internet searches and personal libraries/expert consultation to identify grey literature.
Methods
Initial scoping searches were used to inform more focused systematic searches. Studies directly evaluating dementia nurse specialist roles or giving evidence of effectiveness of interventions/services that could be delivered by them to improve core outcomes were identified by one reviewer and verified by a second reviewer.
Results
While direct evidence for the effectiveness of these roles is lacking, a number of areas were identified in which a nurse specialist role could make a contribution, including preventing adverse events and improving patient experiences and outcomes. There is a considerable body of evidence for the effectiveness of these interventions although the volume of evidence for specific interventions is not always significant.
Conclusions
The evidence indicates that a skilled dementia specialist nurse, undertaking a clearly defined role, and working directly with people with dementia and their carers for a significant proportion of the time, could benefit people with dementia in hospitals and their family carers.
Relevance to clinical practice
Clear guidance for the development and implementation of dementia specialist nurse roles in acute hospital settings.
acute care, advanced practice, Alzheimer's, dementia, hospitals, nurse specialist, nursing, specialist nurse
1394-1405
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Sheldon, Helen
777fec6b-9742-44a8-8e24-78fde1d47ef6
Thompson, Rachel
1a394a6d-b006-4aec-b9be-b3e6c16fdb7b
May 2015
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Sheldon, Helen
777fec6b-9742-44a8-8e24-78fde1d47ef6
Thompson, Rachel
1a394a6d-b006-4aec-b9be-b3e6c16fdb7b
Griffiths, Peter, Bridges, Jackie, Sheldon, Helen and Thompson, Rachel
(2015)
The role of the dementia specialist nurse in acute care: a scoping review.
Journal of Clinical Nursing, 24 (9-10), .
(doi:10.1111/jocn.12717).
Abstract
Aims and objectives
To identify the potential benefits of dementia specialist nursing and to inform the implementation of roles to support people with dementia during hospital admission.
Background
Extended stays and adverse events mean that hospital admissions are costly for people with dementia, and patient experiences and outcomes can be poor. Specialist nurses have been identified as having potential to enhance care quality, reduce excess stays and reduce costs, but the evidence base for dementia specialist nurse roles has not previously been synthesised.
Design
Scoping review.
Data sources
Cochrane Library, Campbell Collaboration, Clinical Evidence, Evidence-Based Medicine, York Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, PubMed, Medline, CINAHL and PsycInfo databases and internet searches and personal libraries/expert consultation to identify grey literature.
Methods
Initial scoping searches were used to inform more focused systematic searches. Studies directly evaluating dementia nurse specialist roles or giving evidence of effectiveness of interventions/services that could be delivered by them to improve core outcomes were identified by one reviewer and verified by a second reviewer.
Results
While direct evidence for the effectiveness of these roles is lacking, a number of areas were identified in which a nurse specialist role could make a contribution, including preventing adverse events and improving patient experiences and outcomes. There is a considerable body of evidence for the effectiveness of these interventions although the volume of evidence for specific interventions is not always significant.
Conclusions
The evidence indicates that a skilled dementia specialist nurse, undertaking a clearly defined role, and working directly with people with dementia and their carers for a significant proportion of the time, could benefit people with dementia in hospitals and their family carers.
Relevance to clinical practice
Clear guidance for the development and implementation of dementia specialist nurse roles in acute hospital settings.
Text
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Text
JCN Author accepted manuscript.pdf
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 December 2014
Published date: May 2015
Keywords:
acute care, advanced practice, Alzheimer's, dementia, hospitals, nurse specialist, nursing, specialist nurse
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 378876
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378876
ISSN: 0962-1067
PURE UUID: 1fa52e26-828f-4dcc-8184-0aa748305ef5
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Date deposited: 16 Jul 2015 14:11
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:39
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Contributors
Author:
Helen Sheldon
Author:
Rachel Thompson
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