Implementing Culture Change in Long Term Care

by Elaine T. Jurkowski

This text offers a strategic approach for promoting an active culture of change in long-term care facilities for older adults and people with disabilities. It discusses the philosophical framework for the delivery of care in these settings and addresses the changing landscape of our long-term care population. With the aim of transforming these facilities from institutional settings to person-centered, homelike environments, the book offers administrators and practitioners numerous strategies and benchmarks for culture change, and addresses tools and resources to support the culture change process. The text describes how these benchmarks have been met and provides ways to address not just knowledge, but also attitudes and behavior, important components of a culture change strategy.
 

Key Features:

  • Elucidates benchmarks that can be implemented in long-term care settings, using the Centers for Medicare/Medicaid's "Long Term Care Artifacts" assessment tool as an intervention
  • Focuses on care practices, the environment, the inclusion and integration of family and community, leadership benchmarks, and workplace practices
  • Includes robust examples of best practices within each of the main artifact arenas
  • Incorporates tools and strategies for assessing the philosophical paradigm of a long- term facility that can help or hinder the culture change process
  • Provides discussion and reflection questions and websites for additional resources
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Design for Aging Review

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The Silverado Story: A Memory-Care Culture Where Love is Greater than Fear