Montessori Impacts on Long-term Care Staff: Results of a Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trial
Michelle Hilgeman, Amber Collins, Whitney Gay, Teddy Bishop, Kimberly Curyto, A Lynn Snow, Whitney Mills, Richard Kennedy

TL;DR
A study found that Montessori-based care improved staff outcomes and person-centered care in nursing homes.
Contribution
This is one of the first clinical trials to examine Montessori approaches' impact on long-term care staff outcomes.
Findings
Staff burnout scores decreased significantly after the Montessori intervention.
Perceptions of Montessori becoming part of routine care increased significantly.
Person-centered care scores improved on a social connectedness and individualized care scale.
Abstract
Person-centered care practices and staff outcomes have been associated in cross-sectional studies in long-term care settings. However, few clinical trials have examined changes in staff outcomes following introduction of a person-centered intervention delivered to residents. This study is among the first to examine the impact of Montessori approaches on staff outcomes for an intervention focused on meaningful engagement, strengths identification, empowerment, and dignity support of residents. We conducted a hybrid type 3 effectiveness-implementation study in 8 US Veterans Health Administration Community Living Centers (CLCs, VA nursing homes) using a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial design. Staff completed online surveys of perceptions of implementation success and effectiveness during pre-intervention or control time points (i.e., baseline and 1-month before baseline, N = 229)…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEducation Methods and Practices · Geriatric Care and Nursing Homes · Aging and Gerontology Research
