为患有多种长期疾病的人提供的服务创新:快速评估小组的反思。

Jon Sussex, Judith Smith, Frances M Wu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:患有多种长期疾病的人是国家卫生服务政策和实践的一个重要关注点,他们的护理是 2019 年国家卫生服务长期计划的一个重要主题。伯明翰兰德和剑桥快速评估中心团队对其在 2018 年至 2023 年期间开展的 10 项评估进行了专题综合,探讨了多种长期病症患者的需求、优先事项和影响:这项总体研究的目标是目标:这项研究的总体目标是:(1) 建立一个有关在初级和社区环境中为患有多种长期病症的各年龄段人群提供服务创新的学习体系,重点关注对患有多种长期病症的人群最重要的问题;(2) 就如何利用快速评价为患有多种长期病症的人群确定服务创新的范围、测试和实施提供信息,提出方法论见解:设计:对多种长期病症的关注来自于伯明翰兰德公司和剑桥快速评估中心于 2018 年采用詹姆斯-林德联盟方法开展的优先排序程序。对 10 项单独快速评估结果的交叉分析通过以下方式进行了补充:(1)将多病症的各个方面纳入后期评估的设计中;(2)采访在综合护理系统中工作或与该系统一起工作的国家和地区利益相关者(n=19);(3)对有关多种长期病症患者远程监测的证据进行快速审查(包括 19 篇论文);以及(4)通过有 10 名参与者和研究团队成员参加的患者、公众和专业人士参与研讨会,与代表患者和护理者的组织一起测试总体见解:虽然患有多种长期疾病的情况很常见,而且是 50 岁以上人群使用医疗和护理服务的常态,但它往往不是医疗服务提供或创新的重点,也不是研究和评估活动的重点。我们讨论了从整个研究中产生的六个主题:(1)我们的医疗系统主要是围绕单一病症而非多重长期病症组织的;(2)研究呼吁和研究通常侧重于单一病症和相关服务;(3)为参与、知情的个人和护理者创造机会并改善自我管理;(4)对患者和护理者重要的措施的重要性;(5)为多重长期病症患者开发和实施服务创新的障碍;以及(6)将多重长期病症患者作为医疗保健规划和提供的优先事项需要做些什么:局限性:对患有多种长期疾病的患者的护理并不是几项快速评估的主要重点。虽然这本身就是一个发现,但它限制了我们对设计和实施的学习,以及对评估方法的学习,也限制了我们对多种长期疾病患者服务创新的学习:通过对评估组合的主题分析,我们推导出了一系列建议,涉及如何将多种长期病症患者的需求更好地纳入政策、研究和实践中:今后的工作:应进一步探索与多重长期病症患者护理相关的不确定领域,包括开发和测试患者在不同环境下(未)协调护理体验的衡量标准,以及调查医疗和护理人员在与多重长期病症患者合作时的体验,以了解哪些方法有效:该奖项由国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)的健康与社会护理服务研究项目(NIHR奖项编号:NIHR134284)资助,全文发表于《健康与社会护理服务研究》第12卷第15期。更多奖项信息请参阅 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Service innovations for people with multiple long-term conditions: reflections of a rapid evaluation team.

Background: People living with multiple long-term conditions represent a significant concern for National Health Service policy and practice, and their care is a major theme in the 2019 National Health Service Long Term Plan. The Birmingham RAND and Cambridge Rapid Evaluation Centre team has undertaken a thematic synthesis of the 10 evaluations it has conducted from 2018 to 2023, exploring the needs, priorities and implications for people with multiple long-term conditions.

Objectives: The aims for this overarching study were to: (1) build a body of learning about service innovations in primary and community settings for people of all ages with multiple long-term conditions, focused on questions that matter most to people with multimorbidity; and (2) develop methodological insights about how rapid evaluation can be used to inform the scoping, testing and implementation of service innovations for people with multiple long-term conditions.

Design: The focus on multiple long-term conditions came from a Birmingham RAND and Cambridge Rapid Evaluation Centre prioritisation process undertaken in 2018 using James Lind Alliance methods. Cross-analysis of the findings from the 10 individual rapid evaluations was supplemented by (1) building aspects of multimorbidity into the design of later evaluations; (2) interviewing national and regional stakeholders (n=19) working in or alongside integrated care systems; (3) undertaking a rapid review of evidence on remote monitoring for people with multiple long-term conditions (19 papers included); and (4) testing overall insights with organisations representing patients and carers through a patient, public and professional engagement workshop with 10 participants plus members of the research team.

Results: While living with multiple long-term conditions is common and is the norm for people over the age of 50 using health and care services, it is not often a focus of health service provision or innovation, nor of research and evaluation activity. We discuss six themes emerging from the totality of the study: (1) our health system is mainly organised around single conditions and not multiple long-term conditions; (2) research calls and studies usually focus on single conditions and associated services; (3) building opportunities for engaged, informed individuals and carers and improved self-management; (4) the importance of measures that matter for patients and carers; (5) barriers to developing and implementing service innovations for people with multiple long-term conditions; and (6) what is needed to make patients with multiple long-term conditions a priority in healthcare planning and delivery.

Limitations: Care of people with multiple long-term conditions was not the principal focus of several of the rapid evaluations. While this was a finding in itself, it limited our learning about designing and implementing, as well as methodological approaches to evaluating, service innovations for people with multiple long-term conditions.

Conclusions: Through a thematic analysis of the portfolio of evaluations, we have deduced a set of suggested implications for how the needs of people with multiple long-term conditions can be better embedded in policy, research and practice.

Future work: Areas of uncertainty related to the care of people with multiple long-term conditions should be further explored, including developing and testing measures of patient experience of (un)co-ordinated care across settings, and interrogating the experience of health and care staff when working with people with multiple long-term conditions, to understand what works.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR134284) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 15. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

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