老年创伤幸存者急性护理和早期康复经历的定性研究。

CMAJ open Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.9778/cmajo.20220013
Lesley Gotlib Conn, Avery B Nathens, Damon C Scales, Kelly Vogt, Camilla L Wong, Barbara Haas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:老年人(≥65岁)在严重损伤住院患者中占相当大的比例,但对他们的护理经历和对结果的看法知之甚少。我们试图描述创伤性损伤后出院的老年人的急性护理和早期康复经历,其长期目标是为老年创伤中以患者为中心的过程和结果测量的选择提供信息。方法:2018年6月至2019年9月,我们对加拿大安大略省Sunnybrook或伦敦健康科学中心的65岁及以上创伤后6个月内出院的成年人进行了电话访谈。采用解释性描述和专题分析,我们借鉴了疾病和老龄化的社会科学理论进行数据解释。我们对数据的分析达到了理论上的极限。结果:我们采访了25名年龄在65-88岁之间的创伤幸存者。大多数人是在跌倒中受伤的。四个主题描述了参与者的经历,如下:“我不觉得自己像个老年人”(即参与者不喜欢被视为老年人或需要老年人特殊护理);“什么都不要告诉他”(即,参与者在急性护理过程中感受到年龄歧视的假设和治疗);恢复正常(即,参与者强调他们积极的生活方式和功能恢复作为护理目标);“我已经失去了对自己生活的控制”(即,与参与者的经历和对衰老的适应有关的重大社会和个人损失)。解释:研究结果表明,老年人在受伤后经历了社会和个人的损失,并强调了隐性年龄偏见如何影响护理经历和结果。这可以为损伤护理的改进提供信息,并指导提供者选择以患者为中心的结果措施。
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A qualitative study of older adult trauma survivors' experiences in acute care and early recovery.

Background: Older adults (aged ≥ 65 yr) account for a substantial proportion of hospital admissions for severe injury, yet little is known about their care experiences and views regarding outcomes. We sought to characterize the acute care and early recovery experiences of older adults who had been discharged after traumatic injury, with a long-term goal to inform the selection of patient-centred process and outcome measures in geriatric trauma.

Methods: From June 2018 to September 2019, we conducted telephone interviews with adults aged 65 years or older who had been discharged after traumatic injury within 6 months from Sunnybrook or London Health Sciences Centres in Ontario, Canada. Using interpretive description and thematic analysis, we drew on social science theories of illness and aging for data interpretation. We analyzed data to the point of theoretical saturation.

Results: We interviewed 25 trauma survivors aged 65-88 years. Most were injured in a fall. Four themes characterized participants' experiences, as follows: "I don't feel like a senior" (i.e., participants disliked being viewed as a senior or as needing senior-specific care); "don't bother telling him anything" (i.e., participants perceived ageist assumptions and treatment in acute care processes); getting back to normal (i.e., participants emphasized their active lifestyles and functional recovery as goals of care); "I have lost control of my life" (i.e., substantial social and personal losses linked to participants' experiences and adaptations to aging generally).

Interpretation: Findings suggest that older adults experience social and personal loss after injury, and underscore how implicit age bias may influence care experiences and outcomes. This can inform improvements in injury care and guide providers in the selection of patient-centred outcome measures.

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