Evaluating the Impact of a Multimodal Education Program to Improve Nursing Assistants’ Skills in Delirium Screening and Management: A Pre-Post Study

Main Article Content

Khaled Saud Dahi Alfadhli1,Faisal Brahim Hlyel Alshammari2 Sami Saud Dahi Alfadhli3,Fahad Brahim Hilyal Alshammari4 Abdulaziz Sulaiman Awadh Alharbi5,Haya Muhaisen Hlyel Alshammari6

Keywords

delirium, nursing assistants, education, skills, competency, pre-post study

Abstract

Delirium is common yet underdetected in hospitalized patients, compromising outcomes. Nursing assistants play a crucial role in routine observation and screening to facilitate early delirium identification and management. This study evaluated impacts of a multimodal delirium education program on nursing assistants’ knowledge, attitudes, and screening skills at a tertiary hospital in Saudi Arabia. Fifty assistants completed interactive workshops, simulation scenarios, and competency assessments before and after training. Knowledge test scores significantly improved from a mean of 55% to 88% post-training. Qualitative feedback emphasized enhanced delirium awareness, confidence, and therapeutic communication preparation. Screening competency including observations, tool administration, interpretation, and reporting steps increased from a baseline mean of 2.9 to 4.7 on a 5-point scale after training. Multifaceted education effectively boosted assistants’ delirium capabilities, with implications for broader implementation and practice changes to improve detection and team collaboration.

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