“…Patients with dementia rely upon hospital staff to maintain their wellbeing (Brooke & Semlyen, 2017;Dewing & Dijk, 2016;Digby & Bloomer, 2014;Edvardsson, Sandman, & Rasmussen, 2011), though the skills required of hospital staff are not demonstrated routinely or consistently (Cowdell, 2010;Dewing & Dijk, 2016;Digby et al, 2017;Goldberg et al, 2014;Griffiths, Knight, Harwood, & Gladman, 2014;Handley et al, 2017;Moyle, Borbasi, Wallis, Olorenshaw, & Gracia, 2010). It is not known how the widely-recommended emotion-focused approaches (Brooker & Surr, 2006;Feil, 1993;Kitwood, 1997) translate into hospital care (Dewar & Nolan, 2013;Edvardsson et al, 2011;Scerri et al, 2015); in part this is due to the culture of hospitals the complex systems of rules and order within hospitals (Street & Coleman, 2012) (Brooke & Ojo, 2017;Handley et al, 2017). In a review of all dementia care training interventions for hospital staff, Scerri et al (2017) found an absence of emotion-orientated training and reported that the wellbeing and emotions of patients were not evaluated as an outcome in any study.…”