Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care, Seniors Interest

Upholding Healthcare Standards following Hospitalisation for People with Dementia

Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), UNSW Sydney 2 mins read

Research from UNSW Sydney’s Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA) has evaluated the impact of a person-centred intervention on the quality of healthcare and clinical outcomes for people living with dementia, following hospitalisation.

The research, published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, is one of the few studies which have successfully adapted the Kitwood model of person-centred care to the requirements of the sub-acute hospital setting, and to have systematically implemented and rigorously assessed its effectiveness in improving outcomes for people living with dementia.

Professor of Nursing Lynn Chenoweth says that one in four people living with dementia are admitted to hospital in any year, and any of those admissions can be an extremely challenging experience for the individual, as well as their carers.

“The multitude of challenges faced include separation anxiety from what is safe and familiar, receiving healthcare from people with little if any knowledge of their life story and unique psychosocial needs, as well as expectations that are often difficult to achieve,” says Professor Chenoweth.

The presence of dementia complicates treatment, care, and outcomes for the person and there is a five-fold higher mortality rate for dementia patients during hospitalisation, compared to older adults of the same age without dementia.

“A person with dementia requires specialised care, treatment and support to keep them safe during a hospital stay, which can absolutely occur with person-centred care,” says Professor Chenoweth.

Healthcare guidelines promote the Kitwood model of person-centred care in supporting people with dementia who exhibit changed behaviour such as agitation, aggression and refusal of treatment and/or care.

For nine months, 90 sub-acute hospital nursing, allied health and medical staff participated in online or face-to-face person-centred education and were supported in delivering person-centred healthcare by senior nursing, allied health and medical staff champions.

Compared with a group of 78 persons living with dementia not receiving person-centred healthcare, from hospital admission to the week of discharge there was a significant reduction in incidence of delirium and accidents/ injuries, a significant reduction in psychotropic medicines and readmission rates, and an increase in discharge to the person’s own home for 80 persons with dementia who received person-centred healthcare. These two participant groups were matched on demographics, cognition and function in activities of daily living. There was also 50% improvement in care quality for persons with dementia following staff education on person-centred healthcare.

“We found that implementing the person-centred care model provided significantly improved clinical outcomes for people with dementia; outcomes which are beneficial for the person and their family/carer and represent an enormous cost benefit for health services”, says Professor Chenoweth.

67 study participants with dementia and 38 of their family carers reported that they were highly satisfied with the person-centred approach to their healthcare.

The favourable health service and clinical results arising from the study confirm the benefits of providing education and supporting clinical staff in person-centred care practices. 

Professor Chenoweth says that future efforts to investigate the therapeutic effects of person-centred care in sub-acute and acute hospital settings should take into consideration the time and financial resources required to plan, implement and evaluate such changes, and to sustain improvements in the outcomes for the person with dementia and the organisation beyond the life of the research project.


About us:

The Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA) is a self funded research Centre with a vision of achieving, through research, healthier brain ageing and better clinical care of age-related brain diseases, specifically Alzheimer's disease and other dementias.


Contact details:

Heidi Douglass: 0435 579 202

[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 20/03/2026
  • 09:20
Monash University

Clinical trial could help patients at risk of hidden cardiovascular leg disease

A medication commonly used to treat gout could be the key to reducing a cardiovascular condition that puts one in five people aged over 75 at risk of devastating complications like leg ulcers, gangrene and amputation. Monash University and Eastern Health are examining the use of the anti-inflammatory drug Colchicine to prevent peripheral artery disease (PAD) as part of the international LEADER-PAD clinical trial. PAD occurs when the arteries that deliver blood to the legs narrow as a result of atherosclerosis, a chronic condition that blocks arteries. A key contributor to the condition is inflammation, so it is hoped that…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 20/03/2026
  • 08:21
Royal Australian College of GPs

‘The start Canberra needs to grow its GP workforce’: 26% more GPs to train in the ACT

Canberra has welcomed a record number of future specialist GPs participating in the Commonwealth-funded Australian GP Training (AGPT) Program with the Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP). In 2026, 29 future GPs have commenced training in the ACT, 26% more than in 2025. Meanwhile, a further 18 eligible doctors applied to train as GPs, indicating with more support for GP supervisors and more Commonwealth-funded AGPT places, the RACGP can train more specialist GPs in Canberra. RACGP NSW&ACT Chair Dr Rebekah Hoffman said the increase is a promising start, and one to build on. “It’s a win, and it’s the start…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Sport Recreation
  • 20/03/2026
  • 06:30
UNSW Sydney

Waves, wipeouts and collisions: when surfers injure others

As surfing grows in popularity, crowded lineups are creating more opportunities for collisions – and in some cases, conflict between surfers in the water. More than one in 10 Australian surfers say they have injured someone else while surfing, according to new research fromUNSW’s Beach Safety Research Group that sheds light on an under-recognised risk in crowded surf breaks. The study, published today in the journal Injury Prevention, found that 93 out of 815 Australian surfers surveyed – or 11.4% – said they had injured another person in the water at some point while surfing. Most injuries were accidental, but…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.