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The Kids4Dementia education program is effective in improving children’s attitudes towards dementia
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Citations
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References
2018
Year
Family MedicineKids4dementia Education ProgramEducational PsychologyEducationEarly Childhood EducationAdapted CurriculumDevelopmental DisabilitiesGeriatric NeurologyTeacher EducationInclusive EducationEarly Childhood TeachingChild PsychologySocial SkillsEarly Childhood DevelopmentKids InsightSocietal StigmaDementia SurveyChild DevelopmentTeacher EnhancementEarly EducationDementiaSpecial EducationTeacher PreparationMedicine
Improving children’s understanding of people with dementia is essential for tackling societal stigma around dementia. Kids4Dementia is a teacher-led multimedia dementia education resource for 9–12 year olds (approximately 150 minutes duration). A non-randomised, waitlist-controlled, mixed-methods design examined whether Kids4Dementia was (1) efficacious in improving students” attitudes towards people with dementia and (2) engaging and acceptable for teachers and students. Students who completed Kids4Dementia (n = 136) showed improved scores on the Kids Insight into Dementia Survey, relative to the control school (n = 67), especially students who had not heard of dementia before (Time × Group × Dementia Familiarity interaction, F(1, 191) = 5.28, p = .023, partial η 2 = .027). Qualitative reports indicated that the program was acceptable and engaging for teachers and students and corroborated improvement in student empathy and behavioural intentions towards people with dementia. The findings provide preliminary evidence for the efficacy of Kids4Dementia as an engaging, stakeholder-directed, curriculum-aligned dementia education program.
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