Improving communicative access and patient experience in acute stroke care: An implementation journey

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Aura Kagan , Nina Simmons-Mackie , Elizabeth Villar-Guerrero , Melodie T. Chan , Ilona Turczyn , J. Charles Victor , Elyse Shumway , Lisa Chan , Rochelle Cohen-Schneider , Mark Bayley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction

Patient experience for people with aphasia/families in acute care is frequently reported as negative, with communication barriers contributing to adverse events and significant long-term physical and psychosocial sequelae. Although the effectiveness of providing supported communication training and resources for health care providers in the stroke system is well documented, there is less evidence of implementation strategies for sustainable system change. This paper describes an implementation process targeting two specific areas: 1) improving Stroke Team communication with patients with aphasia, and 2) helping the Stroke Team provide support to families. The project aimed for practical sustainable solutions with potential contribution toward the development of an implementation practice model adaptable for other acute stroke contexts.

Methods

The project was designed to create a communicatively accessible acute care hospital unit for people with aphasia. The process involved a collaboration between a Stroke Team covering two units/wards led by nurse managers (19 participants), and a community-based Aphasia Team with expertise in Supported Conversation for Adults with Aphasia (SCA™) – an evidence-based method to reduce language barriers and increase communicative access for people with aphasia. Development was loosely guided by the integrated knowledge translation (iKT) model, and information regarding the implementation process was gathered in developmental fashion over several years.

Outcomes

Examples of outcomes related to the two target areas include provision of accessible information about aphasia to patients as well as development of two new products – a short virtual SCA™ eLearning module relevant to acute care, and a pamphlet for families on how to keep conversation alive. Potential strategies for sustaining a focus on aphasia and communicative access emerged as part of the implementation process.

Conclusions

This implementation journey allowed for a deeper understanding of the competing demands of the acute care context and highlighted the need for further work on sustainability of communicative access interventions for stroke patients with aphasia and their families.

改善急性卒中护理中的沟通途径和患者体验:实施历程
在急性护理中,失语症患者/家属的患者经历经常被报道为负面的,沟通障碍导致不良事件和显著的长期身体和心理后遗症。尽管在卒中系统中为卫生保健提供者提供支持的沟通培训和资源的有效性得到了很好的记录,但关于可持续系统变革的实施策略的证据较少。本文描述了针对两个具体领域的实施过程:1)改善卒中团队与失语症患者的沟通,2)帮助卒中团队为家属提供支持。该项目旨在为开发适用于其他急性中风情况的实施实践模型提供切实可行的可持续解决方案。方法本项目旨在为失语症患者创建一个交流无障碍的急症护理病房。这一过程涉及中风小组(由护士经理领导,共19名参与者)和以社区为基础的失语症小组(拥有成人失语症患者支持对话(SCA™)的专业知识)之间的合作,这是一种基于证据的方法,可减少失语症患者的语言障碍,增加他们的交流渠道。开发是由集成知识转换(iKT)模型松散地指导的,有关实施过程的信息是在几年的时间里以发展的方式收集的。与两个目标领域相关的成果示例包括为失语症患者提供可访问的信息,以及开发两种新产品-与急性护理相关的简短虚拟SCA™电子学习模块,以及为家庭提供关于如何保持对话活力的小册子。作为实施过程的一部分,出现了持续关注失语症和交流途径的潜在策略。这一实施过程使我们对急性护理环境的竞争性需求有了更深入的了解,并强调了对中风失语症患者及其家庭的交流获取干预的可持续性进行进一步研究的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Communication Disorders
Journal of Communication Disorders AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
71
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Communication Disorders publishes original articles on topics related to disorders of speech, language and hearing. Authors are encouraged to submit reports of experimental or descriptive investigations (research articles), review articles, tutorials or discussion papers, or letters to the editor ("short communications"). Please note that we do not accept case studies unless they conform to the principles of single-subject experimental design. Special issues are published periodically on timely and clinically relevant topics.
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