Building ADMISSION - A research collaborative to transform understanding of multiple long-term conditions for people admitted to hospital.

Journal of multimorbidity and comorbidity Pub Date : 2025-02-01 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26335565251317940
Miles D Witham, Victoria Bartle, Sue Bellass, Jonathan G Bunn, Duncan Cartner, Heather J Cordell, Rominique Doal, Felicity Evison, Suzy Gallier, Steve Harris, Susan J Hillman, Ray Holding, Peta Leroux, Tom Marshall, Fiona E Matthews, Paolo Missier, Anand Nair, Mo Osman, Ewan R Pearson, Chris Plummer, Sara Pretorius, Sarah J Richardson, Sian M Robinson, Elizabeth Sapey, Thomas Scharf, Rupal Shah, Marzieh Shahmandi, Mervyn Singer, Jana Suklan, James Ms Wason, Rachel Cooper, Avan A Sayer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs; commonly referred to as multimorbidity) are highly prevalent among people admitted to hospital and are therefore of critical importance to hospital-based healthcare systems. To date, most research on MLTCs has been conducted in primary care or the general population with comparatively little work undertaken in the hospital setting.

Purpose: To describe the rationale and content of ADMISSION: a four-year UK Research and Innovation and National Institute of Health and Care Research funded interdisciplinary programme that seeks, in partnership with public contributors, to transform care for people living with MLTCs admitted to hospital.

Research design: Based across five UK academic centres, ADMISSION combines expertise in clinical medicine, epidemiology, informatics, computing, biostatistics, social science, genetics and care pathway mapping to examine patterns of conditions, mechanisms, consequences and pathways of care for people with MLTCs admitted to hospital.

Data collection: The programme uses routinely collected electronic health record data from large UK teaching hospitals, population-based cohort data from UK Biobank and routinely collected blood samples from The Scottish Health Research Register and Biobank (SHARE). These approaches are complemented by focused qualitative work exploring the perspectives of healthcare professionals and the lived experience of people with MLTCs admitted to hospital.

Conclusion: ADMISSION will provide the necessary foundations to develop novel ways to prevent and treat MLTCs and their consequences in people admitted to hospital and to improve care systems and the quality of care for this underserved group.

建筑入院-一个研究合作,以改变对入院人员的多种长期条件的理解。
背景:多重长期条件;通常被称为多病)在住院患者中非常普遍,因此对以医院为基础的卫生保健系统至关重要。迄今为止,大多数关于MLTCs的研究都是在初级保健或普通人群中进行的,在医院环境中开展的工作相对较少。目的:描述入院的基本原理和内容:一个为期四年的联合王国研究与创新和国家卫生与护理研究所资助的跨学科方案,寻求与公共捐助者合作,改变对住院的MLTCs患者的护理。研究设计:基于英国五个学术中心,ADMISSION结合了临床医学、流行病学、信息学、计算机、生物统计学、社会科学、遗传学和护理途径映射方面的专业知识,以检查入院的MLTCs患者的条件、机制、后果和护理途径的模式。数据收集:该方案使用从英国大型教学医院常规收集的电子健康记录数据,从英国生物银行收集的基于人群的队列数据,以及从苏格兰健康研究登记和生物银行(SHARE)常规收集的血液样本。这些方法还辅之以集中的定性工作,探索医疗保健专业人员的观点和住院的MLTCs患者的生活经验。结论:入院将为开发预防和治疗MLTCs及其对住院患者的影响的新方法提供必要的基础,并改善这一服务不足群体的护理系统和护理质量。
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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