# Training Experience and Family Interactions in Care Settings: Findings from the National Dementia Workforce Study

**Authors:** Sunshine Rote, Heehyul Moon, Kathryn Williams-Sites

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.3675 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study finds that training and managing family interactions are key to improving dementia care and worker confidence in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.

## Contribution

The study is the first to analyze large-scale U.S. dementia care workforce data on training, family interactions, and worker confidence.

## Key findings

- Over 90% of direct care workers report receiving training in dementia care, injury prevention, and resident needs.
- Training gaps exist in working with families of dementia patients, and poor family interactions reduce worker confidence.
- Comprehensive training and family relationship strategies are essential for better dementia care and worker retention.

## Abstract

This study analyzes recently released data from the National Dementia Workforce Study (NDWS). The NDSW is the first large, annual survey of the dementia care workforce in the United States and sponsored by the NIA/NIH. Our analysis examines the relationships between training experiences, family interactions, and worker confidence among direct care workers in nursing home (n = 390) and assisted living facility settings (n = 445). Over 90% of direct care workers in both settings report formal or informal training in dementia, injury prevention, and responding to the needs of residents, while the largest informal and formal training gaps identified were in content related to working with families of people living with dementia. Bivariate analyses show that direct care workers with extensive formal and informal, on-the-job training report significantly greater confidence in the ability to adapt to the changing needs of residents living with dementia compared to those with less training in both nursing homes and assisted living facilities. Direct care workers who report problems with residents’ family members are significantly less confident in their ability to remain motivated in providing care. These findings suggest that comprehensive training initiatives combined with family relationship management strategies may be essential for optimizing dementia care quality and worker retention in long-term care settings.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763085