“…We also anticipated the limited capacity of long‐term care, including resource constraints (Berta et al., ; Cammer et al., ), extensive turnover of staff and leaders (Jones et al., ), and the fact that the main direct care provider or healthcare aide (HCA) is an unregulated staff member with variable education and experience (Estabrooks, Squires, Carleton, Cummings, & Norton, ). Lastly, we anticipated the established processes of long‐term care, including how relationships and philosophies shape the care provided and the use of best practices (Cammer et al., ), the limited scope of practice of HCAs (Corazzini et al., ), and how HCAs, excluded from formalized communication, rely on oral information exchange (Caspar, Ratner, Phinney, & MacKinnon, ). The proposed knowledge translation intervention is a peer reminder, defined as an HCA designated to remind, guide, and encourage fellow HCAs to carry out specific care practices with residents of long‐term care.…”