Abstract
Purpose: To determine (1) what dementia education is provided to entry-to-professional practice physiotherapy students in Canada and Australia; (2) how this education is delivered; and (3) the challenges in delivering this education. Method: A designated education provider from each university who offered entry-to-professional practice physiotherapy programmes received a web-based questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and qualitative content analysis. Results: Responses from 30/36 eligible universities resulted in 35 physiotherapy programmes included for analysis. Canadian programmes had a median of 5.5 hours (range, min-max, 0.5-13.0 hours), and Australia 4.0 hours (range, min-max, 2.0-22.0 hours) of dementia education. Lectures and tutorials were the most common method of delivery. There were varying amounts of education on topics such as cognition, communication, and behavioural symptoms and strategies. Challenges included dementia being difficult to teach, student stigma about people with dementia, difficulty providing students with real-life exposure to people with dementia, engaging students in the topic, and integrating dementia education into full programmes. Conclusions: Dementia education across programmes varies, with some programmes lacking content on key topics such as cognitive, communication, and behavioural symptoms and strategies. These results may help physiotherapy accreditation organizations and universities develop dementia education standards and content.