为住院的老年痴呆症患者或有谵妄风险的老年人开发生活故事干预:多阶段、利益相关者参与的共同设计研究。

IF 5 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY JMIR Aging Pub Date : 2024-09-27 DOI:10.2196/59306
Sarah J Flessa, James D Harrison, Roniela Turnigan, Megan Rathfon, Michael Chandler, Jay Newton-Small, Stephanie E Rogers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:患有慢性或急性认知障碍(如痴呆或谵妄)并住院治疗的老年人在获得以人为本的护理方面面临着独特的障碍,而且因住院而产生不良后果的风险更高。因此需要针对这些患者的情况,共同设计适合医院环境的干预措施,以改善护理和治疗效果。通过改善患者与护理团队之间的关系,并提供信息以便根据个人需求和价值观提供护理,患者生活故事干预已在加强以人为本的护理方面显示出前景:本研究旨在让患者、护理伙伴和临床利益相关者参与到共同设计过程中,以调整现有的生命故事模式,使其适用于医院急症护理环境中患有痴呆症和有谵妄风险的老年人:我们招募了住院的痴呆症患者或有谵妄风险的患者、他们的护理伙伴、临床医生和信息学家。共同设计过程分为三个阶段,采用混合方法收集数据,包括深度访谈和问卷调查。我们使用内容分析法对定性数据进行分析,并使用描述性统计法对定量数据进行总结:共有 27 位利益相关者(即患者、护理伙伴和跨学科护理团队 [IDT] 成员)参与了此次调查。利益相关者一致希望通过整合电子健康记录(EHR),将患者生命故事作为医院护理的一种工具。利益相关者分享了生命故事可能涉及的主题,包括社会支持、患者关键生命事件的信息以及最喜欢的活动。与会者就将生命故事融入急症护理的后勤工作发表了见解,包括访谈安排、故事分享方法以及障碍和促进因素。IDT 成员分享了对电子病历整合的偏好,并共同设计了 3 个电子病历整合模拟方案。利益相关者分享了优化未来可接受性和吸收率的方法,包括与护理团队合作并提高对生命故事的认识,确保适合急症环境(例如,以易于消化的方式提炼信息),以及解决对患者能力和隐私的担忧(例如,在适当的时候让护理合作伙伴参与进来)。此外,还征求了对生命故事潜在影响的看法,包括改善患者、护理伙伴和 IDT 成员之间的关系;使患者人性化;提高临床团队、患者和护理人员的满意度;为痴呆患者和有谵妄风险的患者提供更具体、更有针对性的护理:这项研究为医院急症护理环境中的痴呆症患者和有谵妄风险的患者提供了共同设计的生命故事干预。利益相关者提供了宝贵的信息,以确保未来干预措施的可接受性和吸收率,包括在急症护理环境中的潜在益处、促进因素和挑战。
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Developing a Life Story Intervention for Older Adults With Dementia or at Risk of Delirium Who Were Hospitalized: Multistage, Stakeholder-Engaged Co-Design Study.

Background: Older adults with chronic or acute cognitive impairment, such as dementia or delirium, who are hospitalized face unique barriers to person-centered care and a higher risk for negative outcomes stemming from hospitalizations. There is a need for co-designed interventions adapted for these patients to the hospital setting to improve care and outcomes. Patient life storytelling interventions have demonstrated promise in enhancing person-centered care by improving patient-care team relationships and providing information to enable care tailored to individual needs and values.

Objective: This study aims to engage patients, care partners, and clinical stakeholders in a co-design process to adapt an existing life storytelling model for use with older adults with dementia and at risk of delirium in the acute care hospital setting.

Methods: We recruited patients with dementia or at risk of delirium who were hospitalized, their care partners, clinicians, and informaticists. A 3-stage co-design process that used a mixed methods data collection approach including in-depth interviews and surveys was completed. We used content analysis to analyze qualitative data and descriptive statistics to summarize quantitative data.

Results: In total, 27 stakeholder informants (ie, patients, care partners, and interdisciplinary care team [IDT] members) participated. Stakeholders were unanimously interested in using patient life stories as a tool for hospital care through electronic health record (EHR) integration. Stakeholders shared potential topics for life stories to cover, including social support, information on patients' key life events, and favorite activities. Participants provided insights into the logistics of integrating life stories into acute care, including interview arrangement, story-sharing methods, and barriers and facilitators. IDT members shared preferences on EHR integration, resulting in 3 co-designed mock-ups of EHR integration options. Stakeholders shared ways to optimize future acceptability and uptake, including engaging with the care team and promoting awareness of life stories, ensuring suitability to the acute environment (eg, distilling information in an easily digestible way), and addressing concerns for patient capacity and privacy (eg, engaging care partners when appropriate). Thoughts on potential impacts of life stories were also elicited, including improving patient- and care partner-IDT member relationships; humanizing patients; increasing clinical team, patient, and caregiver satisfaction; and enabling more specific, tailored care for patients with dementia and at risk of delirium.

Conclusions: This study resulted in a co-designed life storytelling intervention for patients with dementia and at risk for delirium in an acute care hospital setting. Stakeholders provided valuable information to ensure future intervention acceptability and uptake, including potential benefits, facilitators, and challenges in the acute care setting.

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来源期刊
JMIR Aging
JMIR Aging Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.10%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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