技术相关痴呆症研究中的患者和公众参与:范围审查。

IF 5 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
JMIR Aging Pub Date : 2024-03-04 DOI:10.2196/48292
Pippa Kirby, Helen Lai, Sophie Horrocks, Matthew Harrison, Danielle Wilson, Sarah Daniels, Rafael A Calvo, David J Sharp, Caroline M Alexander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:针对痴呆症患者及其照护者的技术相关研究通常旨在使患者能够在家中居住更长时间,并避免不必要的入院治疗。为了开展以人为本、有效且符合伦理道德的研究,患者和公众参与(PPI)是必要的,尽管这可能会被认为对这部分人来说更加困难。随着近期健康与护理相关技术的快速发展,本综述探讨了研究人员与痴呆症患者及其护理者等利益相关者之间如何开展合作以及合作的影响:本综述旨在描述迄今为止在与技术相关的痴呆症研究中使用的公众参与方法,以及公众参与在该领域的障碍、促进因素和影响:采用 MEDLINE、PsycINFO、Embase 和 CINAHL 对与痴呆症、技术和 PPI 相关的文献进行了范围界定综述。论文由两名作者筛选后纳入。然后由同两位作者使用预先设计的数据提取表提取数据。第三位作者在每个阶段协助解决任何冲突。然后对开展公众宣传的障碍和促进因素进行了研究,并确定了主题:搜索共获得 1694 篇论文,其中 31 篇(1.83%)经筛选后进行了分析。大多数论文(21/31,68%)没有明确区分作为公众宣传活动开展的活动和研究参与者开展的活动,因此,他们的参与并不容易符合国家健康与护理研究所对公众宣传活动的定义。这种混合参与大多侧重于审查或评估技术原型。他们描述了一系列方法,最典型的是使用焦点小组或共同设计研讨会。总共有 29% 的参与者(9/31)描述了在整个研究周期的多个阶段的参与情况,有时还有分享决策权的证据。一些人(23/31,74%)谈到了有效的公众宣传的障碍或促进因素。所指出的挑战通常涉及与有严重认知障碍的人一起工作的问题以及时间和资源方面的压力。据报道,公众参与的影响大多是积极的,包括患者和公众合作伙伴的经历、对研究质量的影响以及为研究人员提供的学习经验。只有 4 篇(13%)论文使用了正式的方法来评估影响:研究人员经常让痴呆症患者和其他利益相关者参与技术研究。结论:研究人员经常让痴呆症患者和其他利益相关者参与技术研究。目前,尽管研究人员希望获得更高水平的参与和合作,但参与范围往往有限。让痴呆症患者、其照护者和其他利益相关者参与进来,可以对研究、患者和公众合作伙伴以及研究人员产生积极影响。更广泛地报告研究方法和促进策略,以及更正式地记录和报告有意义影响的方法将有所帮助,这样所有相关人员--研究人员、患者和其他利益相关者--都能了解我们如何才能最好地共同开展研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patient and Public Involvement in Technology-Related Dementia Research: Scoping Review.

Background: Technology-related research on people with dementia and their carers often aims to enable people to remain living at home for longer and prevent unnecessary hospital admissions. To develop person-centered, effective, and ethical research, patient and public involvement (PPI) is necessary, although it may be perceived as more difficult with this cohort. With recent and rapid expansions in health and care-related technology, this review explored how and with what impact collaborations between researchers and stakeholders such as people with dementia and their carers have taken place.

Objective: This review aims to describe approaches to PPI used to date in technology-related dementia research, along with the barriers and facilitators and impact of PPI in this area.

Methods: A scoping review of literature related to dementia, technology, and PPI was conducted using MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Embase, and CINAHL. Papers were screened for inclusion by 2 authors. Data were then extracted using a predesigned data extraction table by the same 2 authors. A third author supported the resolution of any conflicts at each stage. Barriers to and facilitators of undertaking PPI were then examined and themed.

Results: The search yielded 1694 papers, with 31 (1.83%) being analyzed after screening. Most (21/31, 68%) did not make clear distinctions between activities undertaken as PPI and those undertaken by research participants, and as such, their involvement did not fit easily into the National Institute for Health and Care Research definition of PPI. Most of this mixed involvement focused on reviewing or evaluating technology prototypes. A range of approaches were described, most typically using focus groups or co-design workshops. In total, 29% (9/31) described involvement at multiple stages throughout the research cycle, sometimes with evidence of sharing decision-making power. Some (23/31, 74%) commented on barriers to or facilitators of effective PPI. The challenges identified often regarded issues of working with people with significant cognitive impairments and pressures on time and resources. Where reported, the impact of PPI was largely reported as positive, including the experiences for patient and public partners, the impact on research quality, and the learning experience it provided for researchers. Only 4 (13%) papers used formal methods for evaluating impact.

Conclusions: Researchers often involve people with dementia and other stakeholders in technology research. At present, involvement is often limited in scope despite aspirations for high levels of involvement and partnership working. Involving people with dementia, their carers, and other stakeholders can have a positive impact on research, patient and public partners, and researchers. Wider reporting of methods and facilitative strategies along with more formalized methods for recording and reporting on meaningful impact would be helpful so that all those involved-researchers, patients, and other stakeholders-can learn how we can best conduct research together.

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来源期刊
JMIR Aging
JMIR Aging Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.10%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
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