Extra dementia training for care home staff could save up to 20,000 lives a year and reduce levels of depression, study finds

  • Study found better support for patients led to a significant cut in mortality
  • It also found higher quality of life and fewer cases of depression and aggression
  • If replicated across the UK, it could prevent 20,000 dementia deaths a year  

Extra dementia training for care home staff could save up to 20,000 lives a year in Britain.

Scientists found that better support for residents suffering from the illness led to a significant reduction in mortality, higher quality of life and lower rates of depression, apathy and aggression.

In a nine-month study they focused on training to reduce the use of anti-psychotic medicine and on increasing social interaction with dementia patients.

Scientists found that better support for dementia residents led to a significant reduction in mortality, higher quality of life and lower rates of depression, apathy and aggression


  • Heart-warming friendship of boy, four, and 91-year-old…


    New Health Secretary Matt Hancock uses a controversial app…

Share this article

Seventy per cent of care home residents have the illness and the vast majority are over-medicated and left for hours at a time without any human interaction. Experts warn the average patient talks for only two minutes every six hours.

The study by dementia experts at Exeter University, King’s College London and Oxford Health Trust examined 67 homes and involved 847 patients.

Clive Ballard, presenting the findings at the Alzheimer’s Association conference in Chicago, said out of 64 deaths there were 12 fewer in the homes that had received the extra training.

Replicated across the UK, he calculates this would prevent 20,000 dementia deaths. Providing proper training for care assistants would cost around £4,500 for every life saved.

‘We were able to demonstrate a 36 per cent reduction in mortality,’ said Professor Ballard. ‘If this was a drug, £4,500 to save a life would be a no brainer.’

In a nine-month study, researchers focused on training to reduce the use of anti-psychotic medicine and on increasing social interaction with dementia patients

He said the main impact on mortality came from cutting use of antipsychotics, which are known to be dangerous but are still widely used for dementia patients. Nine months after the training, antipsychotic use was reduced by 50 per cent.

‘Usually GPs visit once a week, and they do not always review the drugs,’ he said. ‘If you educate care assistants, you empower them to take action, to make sure antipsychotics are reviewed frequently – that can make a big difference.

‘We are constantly told staff don’t have enough time. But it doesn’t have to be a big set piece – it can be talking to them while helping them to get dressed, while taking them a cup of tea. That additional social interaction makes a big difference. Just take a moment to imagine life with just two minutes of social interaction each day.

‘To accept this is discrimination against people with dementia. We urgently need to do better.’

Clive Ballard, presenting the findings at the Alzheimer’s Association conference in Chicago, said if replicated across the UK, it could prevent 20,000 dementia deaths a year

Joanne McDermid, of King’s College London, said: ‘Care home staff are under a lot of pressure – it’s a really tough job. It’s a challenging environment, both for residents living with dementia and for staff.

‘Our programme moved care staff to see dementia through the eyes of those who are living it.’

Assistants in the 28,000 care homes in the UK usually require no formal training – and doctors say the training that is available is not based on any evidence that it actually works.

Councils seek £50,000 care home cap to help rural areas

No one should have to pay more than £50,000 of their own fortune for a place in a care home, the leaders of shire counties said.

They called for the cost of the cap, which would run to billions of pounds, to fall on the Treasury and the taxpayer.

The intervention from the County Councils Network comes in advance of the Government’s long-delayed green paper on reform of the care system.

The means-tested system for funding places in care homes is widely condemned as unfair because those who have paid mortgages and saved throughout their lives must pay, while those without savings or assets have their bills paid for them.

David Cameron’s government had proposed a £72,000 cap.

A report from the council network said: ‘For more people in rural areas to benefit from a cap on care, it needs to be set at a lower level, potentially as low as £50,000.

‘It is estimated that only one in ten people would benefit from a £72,000 cap.’

It said the cap must be fully funded.

Source: Read Full Article