Emergency Department Navigator Interventions and Outcome Measures: A Scoping Review

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q4 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Kathleen Parry, Christopher Picard, Rashmi Devkota, Kaitlyn Tate
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction

Emergency department (ED) patient navigators are increasingly used, but a lack of understanding of how ED navigator interventions are designed, described, and evaluated creates gaps in our ability to understand, monitor and improve care. The purpose of this scoping review is to identify how the literature describes and evaluates ED patient navigator interventions for older people transitioning to a primary care setting.

Methods

A scoping review was conducted following the Johanna Briggs Institute updated methodological guidance for the conduct of scoping reviews. We searched three databases: MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL. We included English language articles without any restrictions on study designs that two reviewers screened. All articles focused on distinct ED navigator roles to facilitate transitions for older people from the ED to primary care were included. Data extraction was completed by the primary reviewer and validated by two secondary reviewers. We report study characteristics in a table. Descriptive content analysis was used to analyse the main findings.

Results

A total of 10 studies were included out of 2102 articles identified. All studies used quantitative designs except one, which used a qualitative research design. Four studies were conducted in the United States, two in Australia and the UK and one in Canada and Belgium. Twenty unique outcome measures were identified, with hospital admission rate, frequency of ED presentations and ED/hospital length of stay being the most common. We identified six intervention components: assessment, consultation, liaison, development of care plan, referral and follow-up. Interventions using 4 or more components more commonly reported positive outcomes. Outcome measures used to evaluate interventions were often not tracked across care settings, potentially obscuring the impact of ED navigator interventions across the care continuum.

Conclusion

Future research should examine which patients benefit from ED navigation and which outcome measures might help contextualise intervention effectiveness across care settings.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
9.10%
发文量
77
期刊介绍: International Journal of Older People Nursing welcomes scholarly papers on all aspects of older people nursing including research, practice, education, management, and policy. We publish manuscripts that further scholarly inquiry and improve practice through innovation and creativity in all aspects of gerontological nursing. We encourage submission of integrative and systematic reviews; original quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods research; secondary analyses of existing data; historical works; theoretical and conceptual analyses; evidence based practice projects and other practice improvement reports; and policy analyses. All submissions must reflect consideration of IJOPN''s international readership and include explicit perspective on gerontological nursing. We particularly welcome submissions from regions of the world underrepresented in the gerontological nursing literature and from settings and situations not typically addressed in that literature. Editorial perspectives are published in each issue. Editorial perspectives are submitted by invitation only.
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