Using Communities of Practice in the Home and Community-Based Service Workforce
Sandi Lane, Caroline Yoon, Zavera Basrai, Yisel Pomier Maren, Trish Farnham, Kezia Scales, Gwen Tanner, Nathan Boucher

TL;DR
This paper explores how communities of practice can improve job quality and skills for home care workers in North Carolina.
Contribution
The study introduces a training model combining virtual learning and peer-led communities of practice for direct service workers.
Findings
A pilot training program with 50 workers included virtual modules and peer-led learning groups.
The model aimed to improve communication and self-management skills through active learning methods.
Participants engaged in shared learning and problem-based approaches to reinforce workplace skills.
Abstract
Older adults and people living with disabilities receive home- and community-based services (HCBS) from approximately 115,000 often inadequately supported direct service workers (DSW) in North Carolina (NC). The demand for these workers is increasing rapidly yet fragmented long-term services and support system (LTSS) deter new entrants into these careers. The previous stage of this Centers for Medicare/Medicaid Services (CMS)-funded project identified communication and relationship building as key competencies that DSW need to build career pathways, elevate skills and recognition for their work, and improve job quality and retention. Our project team then conducted a pilot DSW training program: asynchronous virtual training modules, virtual facilitated learning labs, and communities of practice (CoPs) led by direct service workers. The training program was designed to build knowledge…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeriatric Care and Nursing Homes · Healthcare innovation and challenges · Interprofessional Education and Collaboration
