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Lynn Chenoweth

Researcher at University of New South Wales

Publications -  104
Citations -  3321

Lynn Chenoweth is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dementia & Health care. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 96 publications receiving 2907 citations. Previous affiliations of Lynn Chenoweth include University of Western Sydney & University of Technology, Sydney.

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Caring for Aged Dementia Care Resident Study (CADRES) of Person-Centred Care, Dementia-Care Mapping, and Usual Care in dementia: a cluster-randomised trial

TL;DR: In this article, a cluster randomised controlled trial, urban residential sites were randomly assigned to person-centred care, dementia-care mapping, or usual care, and the primary outcome was agitation measured with the Cohen-Mansfield agitation inventory (CMAI).
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Staff outcomes from the caring for aged dementia care resident study (CADRES): a cluster randomised trial.

TL;DR: It is shown that person centred approaches of care, in particular with dementia care mapping, may contribute to reducing staff job related burnout and the findings highlight a potentially important role of managerial support and a whole of system approach.
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A systematic review of what factors attract and retain nurses in aged and dementia care.

TL;DR: Essential strategies linking recruitment with retention are: careful selection of student nurse clinical placements and their ongoing supervision and education, training for skills, leadership and teamwork for new and existing nurses, increased staffing levels, pay parity across different health settings and family friendly policies.
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Self-management in older patients with chronic illness.

TL;DR: Patients at risk of poor self-management included people with low self-efficacy, poor sense of coherence, older age and a primary diagnosis of chronic schizophrenia.
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PerCEN: a cluster randomized controlled trial of person-centered residential care and environment for people with dementia.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that PCC+PCE would improve quality of life and agitation even further was not supported, even though there were improvements in the quality of care interactions and resident emotional responses to care for some of this group.