What Is the Association Between Agency and Levels of Capability and Comfort in Musculoskeletal Care? A Systematic Review.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Rebecca Ludden, David Ring, Prakash Jayakumar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: People who take active responsibility for their health demonstrate agency. Agency in the context of chronic illness management with disease-modifying treatments is commonly linked to adherence and confidence in care seeking. In musculoskeletal health, agency is commonly observed in the accommodation of conditions related to aging and reflected in studies of people not seeking care. The development of agency measures originates from the realm of medical management of chronic illness rather than that of musculoskeletal disease, which is often optional or discretionary. With growing interest in the universal adoption of agency as a performance measure for quality payment programs, there is a need to better understand how agency is measured across musculoskeletal conditions, and how agency may be a modifiable correlate of capability, comfort, mindset, and circumstances.

Questions/purposes: We systematically reviewed the evidence regarding agency among people seeking musculoskeletal specialty care and asked: (1) Are greater levels of agency associated with greater levels of comfort and capability? (2) Are greater levels of agency associated with better mental and social health?

Methods: Following the PRISMA guidelines, we performed searches on May 22, 2023, with searches spanning September 1988 (in PubMed and Web of Science) and September 1946 (in Ovid Medline) to May 2023. We included original clinical studies addressing the relationship between agency and levels of comfort, capability, mindset, and circumstances (by utilizing patient-reported agency measures [PRAMs], patient-reported outcome measures [PROMs], and mental and social health measures) involving adult patients 18 years or older receiving specialist care for musculoskeletal conditions. We identified 11 studies involving 3537 patients that addressed the primary research question and three studies involving 822 patients that addressed the secondary question. We conducted an evidence quality assessment using the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies (MINORS) and found the overall evidence quality to be relatively high, with loss to follow-up and lack of reporting of sample size calculation the most consistent study shortcomings. The measures of capability varied by anatomical region. The Patient Activation Measure (a validated 10- or 13-item survey originally designed to assess a patient's level of understanding and confidence in managing their health and ability to engage in healthcare related to chronic medical illness) was used as a measure of agency in 10 studies (one of which also used the Effective Consumer Scale) and attitudes regarding one's management of musculoskeletal disorders in one study. We registered this systematic review on PROSPERO (Reg CRD42023426893).

Results: In general, the relationships between PRAMs and PROMs are weak to moderate in strength using the Cohen criteria, with 10 of 11 studies demonstrating an association between levels of agency and levels of comfort and capability. The three studies addressing mental health found a weak correlation (where reported) between levels of agency and levels of symptoms of depression and anxiety.

Conclusion: The finding that agency in patients seeking care for musculoskeletal conditions is associated with greater comfort, capability, and mental health supports the prioritization of agency modification during musculoskeletal specialty care. This might include behavioral health and cognitive debiasing strategies along with strategies and services promoting self-management. Our work also points to an opportunity to develop agency measures better suited for discretionary care that more directly assess the cultivation of healthy mindsets, behaviors, and accommodative attitudes toward the discomfort and incapability experienced during aging.

Level of evidence: Level II, prognostic study.

在肌肉骨骼护理中,代理与能力和舒适度之间有何关联?系统综述。
背景:对自己的健康积极负责的人具有能动性。在使用改变疾病疗法进行慢性病管理的情况下,"能动性 "通常与坚持治疗和对寻求护理的信心有关。在肌肉骨骼健康方面,代理通常体现在与老龄化相关的条件适应方面,并反映在对不寻求护理者的研究中。机构衡量标准的制定源于慢性疾病的医疗管理领域,而非肌肉骨骼疾病的医疗管理领域,后者通常是可选的或可自行决定的。随着人们对普遍采用 "代理 "作为质量支付计划的绩效衡量标准的兴趣日益浓厚,我们有必要更好地了解如何在各种肌肉骨骼疾病中衡量 "代理",以及 "代理 "如何成为能力、舒适度、心态和环境的可修改相关因素:我们系统地回顾了有关寻求肌肉骨骼专科治疗者的代理权的证据,并提出以下问题:(1)更高水平的代理权是否与更高水平的舒适度和能力相关?(2)更高的代理水平是否与更好的心理和社会健康相关?根据 PRISMA 指南,我们于 2023 年 5 月 22 日进行了检索,检索时间跨度为 1988 年 9 月(PubMed 和 Web of Science)和 1946 年 9 月(Ovid Medline)至 2023 年 5 月。我们纳入了涉及接受肌肉骨骼疾病专科治疗的 18 岁或以上成年患者的原始临床研究,这些研究探讨了代理与舒适度、能力、心态和环境水平之间的关系(采用患者报告的代理测量指标 [PRAMs]、患者报告的结果测量指标 [PROMs] 以及心理和社会健康测量指标)。我们确定了 11 项针对主要研究问题的研究和 3 项针对次要研究问题的研究,前者涉及 3537 名患者,后者涉及 822 名患者。我们使用非随机研究方法指数(MINORS)进行了证据质量评估,发现总体证据质量相对较高,随访损失和缺乏样本大小计算报告是研究中最常见的缺陷。不同解剖区域的能力衡量标准各不相同。有 10 项研究(其中一项研究还使用了有效消费者量表)使用了 "患者激活度量表"(一种经过验证的 10 或 13 个项目的调查表,最初设计用于评估患者对自身健康管理的理解程度和信心,以及参与与慢性疾病相关的医疗保健的能力)来衡量患者的代理能力,有一项研究使用了 "患者激活度量表 "来衡量患者对肌肉骨骼疾病管理的态度。我们在 PROSPERO(Reg CRD42023426893)上注册了这篇系统综述:总体而言,根据 Cohen 标准,PRAMs 与 PROMs 之间的关系强度为弱至中等,11 项研究中有 10 项研究表明代理水平与舒适度和能力水平之间存在关联。涉及心理健康的三项研究发现,代理水平与抑郁和焦虑症状水平之间的相关性较弱(如有报告):结论:研究发现,肌肉骨骼疾病患者的代理能力与舒适度、能力和心理健康水平相关,这支持在肌肉骨骼专科护理过程中优先考虑代理能力的改变。这可能包括行为健康和认知去势策略,以及促进自我管理的策略和服务。我们的工作还表明,有机会制定更适合酌情护理的机构测量方法,以更直接地评估健康心态、行为和对衰老过程中经历的不适和无能的包容态度的培养情况:二级,预后研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
11.90%
发文量
722
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® is a leading peer-reviewed journal devoted to the dissemination of new and important orthopaedic knowledge. CORR® brings readers the latest clinical and basic research, along with columns, commentaries, and interviews with authors.
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