Designing an occupation-based group intervention for adult inpatient rehabilitation: Partnering with clinicians and patients using a nominal group technique design

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION Australian Occupational Therapy Journal Pub Date : 2024-04-30 DOI:10.1111/1440-1630.12950
Gemma Wall, Claire Pearce, Louise Gustafsson, Stephen Isbel
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Abstract

Introduction

Occupation-based interventions use engagement in a person's daily activities to achieve change. There is growing research into the use of occupation-based group interventions in the inpatient rehabilitation setting. It remains unclear whether occupation-based groups offer comparable outcomes to occupation-based interventions delivered individually; this research will precede a clinical trial aimed at comparing these two approaches for improving occupational performance outcomes. This study details the process of co-designing the intervention. Partnering with clinicians and patients in the design of healthcare interventions can promote patient-centred care, enhance uptake, and improve applicability and sustainability of the intervention to that setting.

Methods

A modified nominal group technique (NGT) design was applied to facilitate two meetings and an electronic survey with an expert panel of clinicians and patients. Twelve participants (n = 4 occupational therapists, n = 1 registered nurse, n = 1 physiotherapist, n = 1 occupational therapy assistant, n = 1 occupational therapy manager, and n = 4 patients) were purposively recruited. A modified approach to the technique's four stages was used: silent generation, round robin, clarification, and voting. Consensus was set at >50%. Qualitative data from group discussions were analysed thematically.

Findings

All participants agreed the intervention should include patient-centred, goal-directed, practice of daily activities, including breakfast and lunch preparation, domestic tasks, and laundry. Other components that were agreed included where the groups could run, group size, eligibility criteria, and frequency. Key themes from clinicians included needing a goal-directed intervention, focused on progressing towards hospital discharge; time and resource requirements were also discussed. Patients emphasised the importance of building social connections, opportunity to engage in meaningful activity, and the importance of linking participation to patient goals.

Conclusion

Through collaboration with clinicians and patients, an occupation-based group intervention considering the available evidence, alongside clinical, experiential, and contextual sources of knowledge was developed; this resulted in an evidence-based, patient-centred, and contextually relevant intervention.

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为成人住院康复设计以职业为基础的小组干预:采用名义小组技术设计,与临床医生和患者合作
导言以职业为基础的干预通过让患者参与日常活动来实现改变。在住院康复环境中使用以职业为基础的小组干预的研究越来越多。目前仍不清楚以职业为基础的小组干预与以职业为基础的个人干预是否具有可比性;这项研究将先于旨在比较这两种方法对改善职业表现结果的临床试验。本研究详细介绍了共同设计干预措施的过程。与临床医生和患者合作设计医疗干预措施可以促进以患者为中心的医疗服务,提高干预措施的吸收率,并改善干预措施在该环境中的适用性和可持续性。方法采用改良的名义小组技术(NGT)设计,与临床医生和患者组成的专家小组召开两次会议并进行一次电子调查。有目的地招募了 12 名参与者(n = 4 名职业治疗师、n = 1 名注册护士、n = 1 名物理治疗师、n = 1 名职业治疗助理、n = 1 名职业治疗经理和 n = 4 名患者)。采用了该技术四个阶段的改进方法:无声生成、循环、澄清和投票。共识率设定为 50%。所有参与者都同意干预措施应包括以患者为中心、以目标为导向的日常活动练习,包括准备早餐和午餐、家务劳动和洗衣。其他与会者同意的内容还包括小组活动的地点、小组规模、资格标准和频率。临床医生提出的关键主题包括:需要一种以目标为导向的干预措施,重点关注出院进展;还讨论了时间和资源要求。结论通过与临床医生和患者的合作,我们开发了一种基于职业的小组干预方法,该方法在考虑现有证据的同时,还考虑了临床、经验和背景知识来源;最终形成了一种以证据为基础、以患者为中心、与背景相关的干预方法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
16.70%
发文量
69
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Australian Occupational Therapy Journal is a leading international peer reviewed publication presenting influential, high quality innovative scholarship and research relevant to occupational therapy. The aim of the journal is to be a leader in the dissemination of scholarship and evidence to substantiate, influence and shape policy and occupational therapy practice locally and globally. The journal publishes empirical studies, theoretical papers, and reviews. Preference will be given to manuscripts that have a sound theoretical basis, methodological rigour with sufficient scope and scale to make important new contributions to the occupational therapy body of knowledge. AOTJ does not publish protocols for any study design The journal will consider multidisciplinary or interprofessional studies that include occupational therapy, occupational therapists or occupational therapy students, so long as ‘key points’ highlight the specific implications for occupational therapy, occupational therapists and/or occupational therapy students and/or consumers.
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