“中间有缺失的东西”:共同设计和试点测试老年人从医院到家庭的护理协调服务

IF 1.1 Q4 GERONTOLOGY
Sarah Collyer, Ella L. Bracci, Alice Bourke, Jackie Kerr, Lainie Rawlins, Gillian Harvey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在计划外住院后返回家中的老年人往往会遇到零碎的护理,导致健康状况不佳和再次住院。采用以人为本的方法,我们与老年人、他们的照顾者和卫生专业人员共同设计并试行了一项护理过渡服务,以改善老年人从医院过渡到家庭的护理。我们与医疗保健专业人员和经历过频繁医院就诊的老年人进行了五次共同设计研讨会,以探索改善从医院到家庭过渡的方法。研讨会的高潮是共同设计护理过渡协调员(CTC)角色。我们在澳大利亚阿德莱德的一家大城市医院进行了为期6个月的试点研究,从老年人和卫生系统的角度确定这一作用的可行性和初步有效性。描述性数据从综合老年评估、行动表、患者检查表和医院数据库中提取,同时与服务用户、提供者和转诊者进行半结构化访谈,并进行主题分析,以提供对服务的定性见解。35名老年人在从医院转到家庭的过程中由CTC照顾。长者康复中心被认为能满足长者的需要,并受到长者、他们的家人/照顾者和转介者的好评。然而,从服务提供者的角度来看,该服务的可行性存在一些挑战。我们的研究结果表明,在共同设计过程中,有可能让经常到医院就诊的体弱多病的老年人参与进来,设计出由他们提供信息并满足他们需求的服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“There’s Something Missing in the Middle” Co-Designing and Pilot Testing a Care Coordination Service for Older People Transitioning from Hospital to Home

Older people returning home after unplanned hospital admissions often experience fragmented care, leading to poor health outcomes and rehospitalisation. Taking a person-centred approach, we co-designed and piloted a care transition service with older people, their carers, and health professionals, to improve the care of older people as they transitioned from hospital to home. We conducted five co-design workshops with healthcare professionals and older people who had experienced frequent hospital presentations, to explore ways to improve the transition from hospital to home. The workshops culminated in the co-design of a Care transition Coordinator (CTC) role. We undertook a 6-month pilot study in one metropolitan hospital in Adelaide, Australia, to determine the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of the role from an older person and health system perspective. Descriptive data were extracted from Comprehensive Geriatric Assessments, action sheets, patient checklists, and hospital databases, while semi-structured interviews were conducted with service users, providers, and referrers and thematically analysed to provide qualitative insights into the service. Thirty-five older people were cared for by the CTC during their transition from hospital to home. The CTC was perceived to meet the needs of older people and was well received by older people, their families/carers, and referrers. However, there were some challenges to the feasibility of the service from a service-provider perspective. Our findings indicate that it is possible to engage frail, older people who are frequent hospital presenters in a co-design process, and to design services that are informed by, and meet their needs.

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来源期刊
Ageing International
Ageing International GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: As a quarterly peer-reviewed journal that has existed for over three decades, Ageing International serves all professionals who deal with complex ageing issues. The journal is dedicated to improving the life of ageing populations worldwide through providing an intellectual forum for communicating common concerns, exchanging analyses and discoveries in scientific research, crystallizing significant issues, and offering recommendations in ageing-related service delivery and policy making. Besides encouraging the submission of high-quality research and review papers, Ageing International seeks to bring together researchers, policy analysts, and service program administrators who are committed to reducing the ''implementation gap'' between good science and effective service, between evidence-based protocol and culturally suitable programs, and between unique innovative solutions and generalizable policies. For significant issues that are common across countries, Ageing International will organize special forums for scholars and investigators from different disciplines to present their regional perspectives as well as to provide more comprehensive analysis. The editors strongly believe that such discourse has the potential to foster a wide range of coordinated efforts that will lead to improvements in the quality of life of older persons worldwide. Abstracted and Indexed in: ABI/INFORM, Academic OneFile, Academic Search, CSA/Proquest, Current Abstracts, EBSCO, Ergonomics Abstracts, Expanded Academic, Gale, Google Scholar, Health Reference Center Academic, OCLC, PsychINFO, PsyARTICLES, SCOPUS, Social Science Abstracts, and Summon by Serial Solutions.
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