Professional caregivers for patients with dementia: Predictors of job and career commitment

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Abstract

The purpose of this study is to identify what factors predict job and career commitment among professional caregivers working with patients with dementia. A secondary analysis was completed using data collected from 77 professional caregivers working in residential dementia special care programs. The findings suggest that professional caregivers commitment to their jobs and careers is most closely related to their level of involvement in the interpersonal aspects of the work, the degree to which they feel personal growth or benefit, and the level of burden that their work generates. Strategies are suggested for improving job and career longevity among professional caregivers by enhancing attachment to patients and families, fostering professional identity and personal growth, and monitoring and managing professional caregiver burden.

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Drebing, C., McCarty, E. F., & Emerson Lombardo, N. B. (2002). Professional caregivers for patients with dementia: Predictors of job and career commitment. American Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Dementias, 17(6), 357–366. https://doi.org/10.1177/153331750201700604

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