Background And Objectives: Several studies suggest that to substantially improve residents' psychosocial well-being, traditional-model nursing homes should redesign themselves as small, homelike "households" along with comprehensively adopting other aspects of "culture change," a set of reforms meant to improve residents' quality of life. But this evidence mainly comes from qualitative studies. This comparative, observational study tested quantitatively whether residents in a household-model nursing home that had comprehensively adopted culture change reforms displayed greater positive affect, increased cognitive engagement, more extensive social interactions with staff and greater use of the environment than did residents at partial culture-change-adopting facilities with traditional, institutional environments.
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