Developing interactional strategies for delivering integrated personalised dementia care planning: Training and resources to support a funding application and an ongoing career in dementia research
Award Number
ICDA-D04Award Type
Career Development AwardsProgramme
Three Schools’ Dementia Programme (2021-2024)Status / Stage
ActiveDates
1 June 2022 -31 May 2023
Duration (calculated)
00 years 11 monthsFunder(s)
NIHR SSCRFunding Amount
£21,941.00Funder/Grant study page
NIHR SSCRContracted Centre
University College LondonPrincipal Investigator
Sarah GriffithsPI Contact
sarah.griffiths@ucl.ac.ukWHO Catergories
Models across the continuum of careTools and methodologies for interventions
Disease Type
Dementia (Unspecified)CPEC Review Info
Reference ID | 607 |
---|---|
Researcher | Reside Team |
Published | 29/06/2023 |
Data
Award Number | ICDA-D04 |
---|---|
Status / Stage | Active |
Start Date | 20220601 |
End Date | 20230531 |
Duration (calculated) | 00 years 11 months |
Funder/Grant study page | NIHR SSCR |
Contracted Centre | University College London |
Funding Amount | £21,941.00 |
Abstract
NHS England’s mission is for every person living with dementia to have a personalised support plan, integrating priorities for action across primary, social, and secondary health care, achieved through ‘proactive personalised conversations’ focusing on ‘what matters to them, paying attention to their needs and wider well-being.’ Annual dementia QoF reviews, the primary care mechanism through which care planning is summarised into personalised care plans, are inconsistent, often lack quality, and based on standardised ‘long term conditions’ formats, not allowing for the nuanced conversations needed to reflect dementia care complexities. How these concerns should interact in practice with social care concepts of personalised and strengths-based support are unclear.
Aims
This award aims to support Sarah to develop interactional strategies for delivering integrated personalised dementia care planning.
It will consolidate Sarah’s role as mixed methods dementia researcher by providing focussed training alongside opportunities to build her network across primary care and social care.