行为改变的共同设计:一种为中风幸存者提供理论支持的口腔护理干预的发展。

Design for health (Abingdon, England) Pub Date : 2022-07-21 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1080/24735132.2022.2096291
Matthew Lievesley, Rachael Powell, Daniel Carey, Sharon Hulme, Lucy O'Malley, Wendy Westoby, Jess Zadik, Audrey Bowen, Paul Brocklehurst, Craig J Smith
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引用次数: 2

摘要

这篇文章讨论了如何研究了解口腔护理需求和经验的中风幸存者被转化为一个原型的干预。它解决了如何在医疗保健环境中发展服务改进的挑战,既以人为本,通过使用共同设计,也基于理论和证据。与中风幸存者、家庭护理人员以及健康和社会护理专业人员共同设计的一系列研讨会与行为因素分析同时进行。这确定了可以改善该社区口腔保健的关键行动,并确定了将公认的行为改变技术纳入干预措施的机会。通过这种方式,行为改变理论、定性研究证据和基于经验的协同设计有效地结合在一起。建议的干预措施主要是面向患者的资源,旨在支持中风幸存者及其护理人员进行口腔护理,因为他们从医院护理过渡到家庭生活。这解决了现有规定中的一个空白,因为其他已发表的中风口腔护理方案是面向临床医生的,主要涉及急性护理(中风后的头几天)。虽然它借鉴了单个设计项目的经验,但本研究阐明了设计实践方法与行为改变理论应用之间的“工作关系”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Co-designing for behaviour change: The development of a theory-informed oral-care intervention for stroke survivors.

Co-designing for behaviour change: The development of a theory-informed oral-care intervention for stroke survivors.

Co-designing for behaviour change: The development of a theory-informed oral-care intervention for stroke survivors.

Co-designing for behaviour change: The development of a theory-informed oral-care intervention for stroke survivors.

This article discusses how research to understand the oral care needs and experiences of stroke survivors was translated into a prototypical intervention. It addresses the challenge of how to develop service improvements in healthcare settings that are both person-centred, through the use of co-design, and also based on theory and evidence. A sequence of co-design workshops with stroke survivors, family carers, and with health and social care professionals, ran in parallel with an analysis of behavioural factors. This determined key actions which could improve mouthcare for this community and identified opportunities to integrate recognized behaviour-change techniques into the intervention. In this way, behaviour change theory, evidence from qualitative research, and experience-based co-design were effectively combined. The intervention proposed is predominantly a patient-facing resource, intended to support stroke survivors and their carers with mouth care, as they transition from hospital care to living at home. This addresses a gap in existing provision, as other published oral-care protocols for stroke are clinician-facing and concerned primarily with acute care (in the first days after a stroke). Although it draws on the experiences of a single design project, this study articulates a 'working relationship' between design practice methods and the application of behaviour change theory.

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