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Hoy — Marzo 4th 2026Tus fuentes RSS

Re‐Engaging in Activities of Daily Living After Critical Illness: A Qualitative Review

ABSTRACT

Aim

To explore the qualitative literature regarding the experiences of survivors of critical illness re-engaging in activities of daily living.

Design

Qualitative systematic review.

Methods

Databases were searched with three broad categories of search terms: (1) critical illness, (2) activities of daily living, and (3) participant experiences. Articles were included if they reported qualitative data on the experiences of adults who were re-engaging with activities of daily living after admission to an intensive care unit. The findings from these studies were thematically analysed.

Data Sources

A search of Medline, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO and AMED was conducted on the 9th September 2024.

Results

After removing duplicates, the literature search identified 6267 articles. The full texts of 120 articles were reviewed, and 44 were included for data extraction. Thematic analysis identified three themes: (1) loss of autonomy, (2) striving to reclaim independence, and (3) shifting familial dynamics and imposing a burden.

Conclusion

Survivors of critical illness face significant challenges when re-engaging with daily activities. The effort to regain autonomy often leads to feelings of helplessness and a reluctance to engage in both daily tasks and social activities. The emotional burden of dependence and the perception of being a burden further complicate their recovery.

Implications for the Profession

Health services should focus on integrating physical rehabilitation, mealtime support, and cognitive and psychological therapy to effectively cater to the diverse needs of critical illness survivors and their families.

Impact

This review highlights the complex challenges of re-engaging in activities of daily living after critical illness and emphasises the need for multidisciplinary rehabilitation to improve physical, cognitive, and emotional recovery.

Reporting Method

Reporting of this review followed the ENTREQ checklist, in accordance with EQUATOR guidelines.

Patient or Public Contribution

No Patient or Public Contribution.

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How public health practitioners in the UK are using parental guidance on talking to children about weight: a qualitative study

Por: Brockman · R. · Gillison · F. · Grey · E. B. · Jago · R. · MacArthur · G. J. · Gutteridge · C. · Langford · R.
Objective

To understand how public health practitioners (PHPs) are using parental guidance on talking to children in their work with parents. In 2021, evidence-based guidance was produced for parents of young children to facilitate these conversations, but it is unclear how this guidance is being promoted to parents or used by PHPs.

Design

Qualitative study, consisting of in-depth, semistructured interviews.

Setting

Local authority, National Health Service or other healthy weight service providers in the UK.

Participants

Participants were PHPs working on children’s healthier lifestyles programmes in the UK as part of the UK’s National Child Measurement Programme (NCMP). Invitations to participate were distributed via the Department of Health and Social Care and regional and national networks.

Results

24 participants were interviewed. Practice varied between organisations with the guidance being used in NCMP letters to parents, in follow-up phone calls with parents and in training NCMP staff and other health or education professionals. Participants valued the evidence-based guidance and its compassionate tone, feeling it gave them and parents, confidence in addressing a sensitive topic. Some felt it was too lengthy for parents with learning disabilities or low literacy levels. Others identified a need for similar guidance for older children. Though helpful, participants acknowledged the guidance was only one small part of a necessary systems-wide approach to promoting healthy weight.

Conclusions

The guidance is a useful tool but needs systematic promotion to increase use and effectiveness. Further work is warranted to develop adapted versions for other populations.

Rationale and design of uLtrasOund applicability in the assessment of patients with fibRosing interstitial lung Disease (LORD): a research protocol of a prospective cohort study

Por: Patabendige · S. · Harders · S. M. W. · Bendstrup · E. · Durheim · M. T. · Laursen · C. B. · Andersen-Ranberg · K. · Brockhattingen · K. K. · Kildegaard · C. · Bendixen · M. · Davidsen · J. R.
Introduction

Fibrosing interstitial lung disease (F-ILD) are a heterogeneous group of diseases with multiple subtypes. Both idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and other ILDs associated with a risk of developing progressive pulmonary fibrosis (PPF) are subtypes of this category. A multidisciplinary team discussion, including a chest high-resolution CT (HRCT), is usually considered the gold standard for diagnosis of F-ILD. Repeated HRCT is one of several established methods to assess progression and thus development of PPF, but it is associated with substantial costs and radiation exposure. Thoracic ultrasound (TUS) and other ultrasound (US) methods have emerged as radiation-free methods for both diagnosing and monitoring disease severity in F-ILD. Yet, consistent knowledge on the use of different TUS- and US methods in patients with F-ILD is limited.

Methods

The LORD study is a prospective cohort study conducted in participants with F-ILD at a tertiary ILD centre in Denmark. Physiological testing and patient-related outcome measures, together with TUS- and US examinations, will be performed at inclusion, after 6 and 12 months. The correlations between these assessments will be evaluated. HRCT will be conducted between 3 months prior to and 1 month after baseline, and after 1 year. At least 34 participants will be included.

Ethics and dissemination

The protocol was approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (journal number: 22/45135) and the Science Ethics Committee for the Region of Southern Denmark (journal number: S-20220036). Results will be published in peer-reviewed international journals and will be presented at an international congress.

Trial registration number

NCT06844331.

Effectiveness and acceptability of interventions to improve faecal immunochemical test (FIT) return in both asymptomatic (screening) and symptomatic populations: protocol for a systematic review of qualitative and quantitative evidence

Por: Ezaydi · N. · Kurien · M. · Allchin · O. · Biggs · K. · Chowdhury · N. · Humes · D. · Kellar · I. · Shanbhag · S. · Brown · J.
Introduction

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most common cancer in the UK and second leading cause of cancer-related deaths. The faecal immunochemical test (FIT) is a non-invasive home-based test used for both symptomatic assessment and population-based screening. However, approximately 30% of screening FIT kits and 10% of symptomatic FIT kits are never returned. Under-served populations, including ethnic minorities, socioeconomically deprived communities and those with mental health conditions, experience particularly low FIT return rates, contributing to health inequalities in CRC outcomes. This systematic review aims to synthesise evidence on the effectiveness and acceptability of interventions to improve FIT returns in both asymptomatic screening and symptomatic populations, with particular focus on under-served communities.

Methods and analysis

We will conduct a systematic review of qualitative and quantitative evidence. We will search Scopus, MedLine via Ovid, CINAHL via Ebsco and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials from September 2010 onwards, supplemented by reference screening and trial registry searches. Eligible studies will include randomised controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies, observational studies, qualitative studies, mixed-methods studies and implementation studies examining FIT interventions in screening or symptomatic populations. Two reviewers will independently screen search results for eligible studies. Data extraction will capture study characteristics, population demographics, intervention components and outcomes including FIT return rates, acceptability, feasibility and implementation factors. Quantitative data will undergo systematic tabulation and meta-analysis where appropriate, with narrative synthesis for heterogeneous studies. Qualitative data will be analysed using framework-based thematic analysis, mapping findings to both the theoretical domains framework and theoretical framework of acceptability. A mixed-methods synthesis will integrate quantitative and qualitative findings to identify intervention characteristics, implementation strategies and contextual factors associated with improved outcomes across different population groups.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethics approval is not required as this systematic review will analyse published studies. Findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publication and conference presentations.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD420251111663.

Effectiveness of Organisational Strategies for Pressure Injury Prevention and Treatment in Acute Hospital Settings: A Systematic Review

ABSTRACT

Aim

To investigate the effects of organisational interventions on the incidence, healing and management of pressure injuries in adult patients in acute hospital settings.

Design

Systematic review.

Methods

The review included adult patients at risk of or with pre-existing pressure injuries in acute hospital settings, excluding mental health units, emergency departments or operating theatres. Interventions employed in the included studies were categorised using the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care taxonomy.

Data Sources

Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, EBSCO CINAHL Complete and Web of Science Core Collection were searched from 01 January 2012 to 31 December 2023.

Results

Of 8861 records identified, 7 prevention studies met the inclusion criteria. Six studies reported reductions in pressure injury incidence. Included studies employed various combinations of 14 organisational strategies to enhance practices. Educational interventions were utilised in six studies, including educational meetings, materials and outreach visits. Other common strategies included audit and feedback, communities of practice and continuous quality improvement. The interventions targeted patients and clinicians, primarily nurses, with some involving multidisciplinary teams. The focus was on enhancing healthcare practices through systematic approaches and stakeholder engagement.

Conclusions

Organisational strategies targeting both patients and clinicians as part of an intervention bundle may enhance the prevention of pressure injuries in acute hospital settings. Further, high-quality effectiveness–implementation hybrid trials are required to evaluate these strategies.

Implications for the Profession and Patient Care

Organisational factors influence clinicians' ability to implement evidence-based practices. The effectiveness of specific organisational strategies in acute settings is uncertain. Multiple organisational strategies targeting patients and clinicians may improve the implementability of a pressure injury prevention intervention.

Reporting Method

This study adhered to PRISMA guidelines.

Patient or Public Contribution

Neither patients nor the public were directly involved in this study.

Biobanking knowledge and donation willingness among musculoskeletal patients in England: a multisite cross-sectional study

Por: Boakye Serebour · T. · Kerasidou · A. · Gray · N. · Griffin · X. L. · Peach · C. · Singh · H. P. · Wheway · K. · Ambrosio · M. d. G. · Baldwin · M. · Snelling · S. J. B.
Objective

To date, few studies have investigated the factors associated with musculoskeletal patients’ willingness to donate biological samples and their knowledge regarding the use of such samples. We investigated the associations between these distinct knowledge factors, patients’ willingness to donate and socio-demographic factors.

Design

Cross-sectional survey.

Setting

Musculoskeletal outpatient clinics across four sites in England, representing varied demographic populations.

Participants

A total of 469 adult patients attending musculoskeletal appointments were recruited through convenience sampling.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Ordinal regression models were employed to identify socio-demographic and clinical predictors of patients’ willingness to donate biological samples. Other outcome measures specifically in two areas of patient knowledge include: (1) knowledge of sample use and (2) knowledge of surgical waste tissue value and management.

Results

Only 37% of participants were aware of the term ‘biobank’. Despite this, participants showed a high level of knowledge regarding both biological sample use and surgical waste tissue management, although their understanding varied considerably by ethnicity and education. Participants with no formal education exhibited a lower level of knowledge in both areas related to sample use and surgical waste tissue management for biomedical research ((OR 0.30, 95% CI 0.14 to 0.61; p=0.001); (OR=0.29, 95% CI 0.16 to 0.52, p

Conclusions

Despite low awareness, musculoskeletal patients showed a high willingness to participate in biobanking. However, significant disparities by ethnicity and education persist. Targeted, inclusive engagement strategies are needed to address under-representation and foster informed, equitable participation of musculoskeletal patients in biomedical research.

Key protective factors that mitigate the impact of childhood trauma on poor mental health in adulthood: a scoping review protocol

Por: Clarke · A. · Hallett · N. · Brown · Y. · Cunnington · C. · Dauvermann · M. R. · Jordan · G. · Reniers · R. · Taylor · J.
Introduction

A significant proportion of adults in England and Wales report experiencing childhood trauma, which is often associated with poor health and negative social outcomes including a significant increase in the risk of poor mental health outcomes in adulthood. This proposed scoping review adopts a broad definition of childhood trauma and applies both a salutogenic framework and ecological systems theory to explore how protective factors at five ecological levels can support mental well-being. The review will also examine how protective factors vary across different population groups and contexts.

Methods and analysis

The scoping review will follow the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) protocol for scoping reviews. The databases that will be searched are Embase, PubMed, Web of Science, PsycINFO, CINAHL and Medline. Studies will be included if they include protective factors and involve adults aged 18 and over who have experienced childhood trauma, whether self-identified, retrospectively self-reported or measured using a validated instrument. Studies will be excluded if they focus on participants under the age of 18.

All search results will be uploaded to Covidence, duplicates removed, and titles/abstracts screened by at least two reviewers based on inclusion criteria. Full texts of potentially relevant sources will be imported into EndNote 21. Reasons for exclusions will be documented and disagreements resolved through discussion or a third reviewer. The full process will be reported using a Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram. Data will be extracted by at least two reviewers using a tool developed by the team based on the JBI guidance. A best-fit framework analysis will be used, using a matrix developed by the researchers including the four salutogenic domains and the five levels of the ecological framework.

Ethics and dissemination

Formal ethical approval is not necessary for this scoping review as it does not involve the collection of primary data. The outcomes of this study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journal articles, conference/seminar presentations, and developed into resources for stakeholders and collaborators.

Trial registration number

Open Science Framework (DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/CJRUY).

Development of a resource use measure to capture costs related to unpaid care for people living with non-memory led dementia: a modified Delphi study

Por: Cullen · K. · Brotherhood · E. V. · Hayes · O. · Mansfield · V. · Suarez-Gonzalez · A. · Zimmermann · N. · Stott · J. · Fitzsimmons · D.
Objectives

To determine the personal, National Health Service and wider societal resource use in relation to caring responsibilities for carers of people living with non-memory led dementias (NMLDs); and to design a resource use measure (RUM) that can be delivered in the Better Living with Non-memory-led Dementia (BELIDE) randomised controlled trial, part of the Rare Dementia (RD) - TALK research programme.

Design

The first stage was to identify and review any existing RUMs that could be used or adapted to the trial population and setting. If no measures were identified, the second stage was initial informal discussions with healthcare professionals (HCPs) and the programme patient and public involvement representatives to inform the perspective, settings of care and main resource items to develop a new RUM. In the third stage, a first draft of the RUM was tested for content and face validity in a modified Delphi study comprising HCPs and carers. The measure was revised and, in the final stage, piloted in the first 3 months of the BELIDE trial to assess acceptability and feasibility of collecting the economic outcomes and the completeness of data collection. The key drivers of resource use and costs were assessed, and appropriate face validity checks were applied to ensure accurate description of the treatment pathways.

Participants and setting

Carers and family of people living with NMLD recruited from Rare Dementia Support members in the UK, and a broad range of HCPs with experience of working with people who have NMLD to capture the different dimensions of experience, grade and skill mix.

Results

In total, 20 people participated in the modified Delphi study, 11 HCPs and 9 carers. Rare Dementia Support groups and 1:1 calls were highly rated, as were general practitioner appointments. The greatest consensus was in the productivity and carer tasks; all caring tasks were highly rated. Healthcare practitioners rated healthcare items as higher importance than carers themselves.

Conclusions

Unpaid carers and HCPs are the experts in the resource impact of caring for someone with NMLD and have been underserved in research to date. This research, as part of preparatory stages of the BELIDE trial, has enabled the timely development of a comprehensive and valid RUM for unpaid carers of people with NMLD.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD42022356943.

Trial registration number

NCT06241287.

Central venous versus short midline catheter in difficult intravenous access patients: a randomised clinical pilot trial

Por: Mellander · C. · Seifert · S. · Hammarskjöld · F. · Taxbro · K.
Background

Patients with difficult intravenous access (DIVA) are at increased risk of delays, discomfort and complications due to multiple failed intravenous access attempts. However, evidence comparing commonly used alternatives, short midline catheters (SMLs) and central venous catheters (CVCs) in this population is limited.

Objective

To evaluate the feasibility of a larger randomised controlled trial comparing SMLs with CVCs in DIVA patients using predefined feasibility outcomes.

Design

This trial was a pragmatic, open-label, single-centre, randomised controlled pilot trial with 1:1 randomisation. Participants were recruited from January to August 2025 with follow-up until September 2025.

Setting

Ryhov County Hospital, Jönköping, a teaching county hospital in Sweden.

Participants

Adult patients (≥18 years) with DIVA, requiring intravenous therapy for 4–29 days.

Interventions

Patients received either a 10-cm SML in the upper arm or a single- or double-lumen CVC in the jugular or subclavian vein.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Primary outcomes were feasibility criteria: eligibility, recruitment, retention, adherence, missing data and skin puncture attempts. Secondary outcomes included insertion and dwell time, and catheter complications (infection, thrombosis and malfunction).

Results

Of 73 patients screened, 40 (55%) were eligible and 30 (75%) (15 males (50%); median (IQR) age, 73 (61–82) years) were randomised to receive SML (n=15) or CVC (n=15). Three patients in the SML group were not included in the data analysis due to one failed insertion and two incomplete follow-ups. Retention (93%), adherence (97%) and missing data (0%) fulfilled predefined thresholds. The only criterion not met was the number of skin puncture attempts, with 52% of patients requiring two or more. Median catheter dwell time was 5.5 days for SML and 4.0 days for CVC. Complication rates per 1000 catheter days were 101.4 for SML versus 9.1 for CVC, primarily due to a higher rate of malfunction in SML (58% versus 7%). No infections or thromboses were observed.

Conclusion

This pilot trial met all but one feasibility criterion, demonstrating that a larger randomised controlled trial is achievable. The findings highlight practical challenges, particularly related to puncture attempts and catheter performance, that should be addressed in the design of a definitive trial.

Trial registration number

NCT06719869.

Beyond barriers: a qualitative evidence synthesis protocol of South Asian involvement in mental health research in high-income countries

Por: Khan · N. A. · Coventry · P. A. · Ali · H. · Fulbright · H. · Brown · J. V. E.
Introduction

There is a recognised need to provide equity in healthcare through inclusion of ethnic minorities in research. South Asians, the largest ethnic minority group in the UK, experience high levels of mental illness, often against the backdrop of socioeconomic deprivation and discrimination. The research community recognises that South Asian communities are often excluded from health research. Efforts have been made to understand the barriers and facilitators to their participation. However, the participation of individuals at the intersection of mental ill health and South Asian ethnicity remains understudied. This is a protocol for the synthesis of qualitative evidence from mental health research studies about participation, motivation and barriers to recruitment of South Asians in high-income countries.

Methods and analysis

We will search 10 databases for qualitative evidence on participation of South Asian individuals in mental health research studies in high-income countries: MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Health Management Information Consortium, Social Policy and Practice, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Social Sciences Citation Index, Science Citation Index Expanded and ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Citation Index. Search terms for the following five concepts will be used: (1) South Asia, (2) ethnic minority, (3) mental health conditions, (4) barriers and facilitators to participation and (5) high-income countries. No date restriction will be applied to the search. Searches will be limited to studies in the English language. Study selection and data extraction will be performed by two researchers independently, using Covidence. Demographic data, thematic outputs and salient discussion points will be extracted from final full-text inclusions and entered into NVivo for coding. Meta-ethnographic approaches using first and second-order constructs from included studies will be used to form third-order constructs. This synthesis will generate new knowledge regarding the intersectionality of mental health and South Asian ethnicity.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethical approval is not required as this study is a synthesis of published data. This review will provide new knowledge regarding the requirements for researchers and practitioners to advance the involvement of South Asian populations in mental health research. This will undoubtedly enhance equity in the long term, reduce the burden of mental disorders and enable the provision of more effective mental health care for South Asian communities.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD42025626382.

Learning from patients about their experiences with early adoption of virtual care appointments in primary care in Ontario, Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative study

Por: Ashcroft · R. · Dahrouge · S. · Lam · S. · Saluja · K. · Jessa · H. · Boudreault · A. · Rayner · J. · Dolovich · L. · Brown · J. B.
Objective

The objective of this study was to examine patient experiences with virtual (telephone and video) encounters in primary care and make recommendations to inform the broader adoption of virtual care.

Design

A descriptive qualitative study using semi-structured interviews for data collection.

Setting

Ontario, Canada.

Participants

Fifty-five primary care patients across Ontario, Canada, who had experienced at least one virtual (telephone or video) encounter with a healthcare provider in primary care, participated in semi-structured individual interviews conducted between 15 January 2021 and 22 March 2021.

Results

With respect to patients’ experiences with virtual care appointments, we identified the following seven themes: (1) Enhancing access, (2) Importance of patient-provider relationship, (3) Active communication and attunement, (4) Assuring privacy and confidentiality, (5) Shorter appointments, (6) Asynchronous technologies being underutilised and (7) Strengthening the future of virtual care. Despite the rapid adoption of synchronous virtual care, participants generally reported positive experiences. Virtual care enhanced access to care and was overwhelmingly supported for continued use. While new patient-provider relationships faced challenges, pre-existing, positive relationships thrived. Concerns about the shortness of virtual care appointments were reported.

Conclusions

Virtual care offers a promising modality for patients to experience care. Moving forward, primary care practices should consider expanding options for asynchronous virtual care, consider the length of virtual care appointments and offer patients greater choice in the modality of their care appointments.

Understanding patient experience during Lokomat rehabilitation in children and adolescents: a clinical observational study combining self-evaluation and physiological metrics

Por: Chiappini · M. · Malerba · G. · Dei · C. · Bellazzecca · S. · Falivene · A. · Costantini · S. · Morganti · R. · Diella · E. · Storm · F. · Ambrosini · E. · Cavallo · A. · Biffi · E.
Objectives

To examine the emotional, cognitive and dispositional experience of children and adolescents undergoing Lokomat rehabilitation by integrating self-evaluation, therapist observations and physiological metrics across repeated sessions, with the aim of characterising how patient experience evolves throughout paediatric robot-assisted gait training.

Design

Prospective observational study using a multidimensional assessment approach combining self-report, therapist ratings and physiological measures.

Setting

Inpatients undergoing robot-assisted gait training (RAGT) with the Lokomat at the Scientific Institute Eugenio Medea in Bosisio Parini (Italy).

Participants

42 children and adolescents (N=42; mean age 11.66±5.59 years) undergoing RAGT.

Interventions

Robot-assisted gait therapy with the Lokomat. Participants underwent 30-minute therapy sessions as per routine rehabilitation protocols, with treatment durations ranging from 15 to 20 sessions, as prescribed by their referring clinician.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Participants completed ad-hoc questionnaires about emotional, cognitive and dispositional factors before and after therapy; therapists provided structured assessments of patient engagement and psychological states. Physiological data, such as heart rate variability (HRV) and electrodermal activity (EDA), were recorded using wearable sensors to capture physiological correlates of emotional and cognitive engagement.

Results

The results showed that by the end of Lokomat therapy, patients displayed increased cognitive engagement and better emotional regulation, along with higher vagal activity (normalised high-frequency) and increased phasic EDA responses. According to the therapists, patients appeared more confident, calm and cooperative. Sympathetic activation observed during satisfaction ratings reflected the involvement of the autonomic nervous system in positive emotional experiences.

Conclusions

This study, therefore, emphasises a multidimensional approach to rehabilitation, which involves subjective patient self-assessments, therapist observations and physiological signals in an effort to capture a more comprehensive patient experience. The findings highlight the importance of personalised, patient-centred approaches and contribute new evidence on the psychological and physiological effects of RAGT in paediatric populations. Further research is warranted to confirm these results and explore their clinical implications.

Trial registration number

NCT05767268.

Clinicians' Perspectives of the Pressure Injury Treatment Advisory ‘PITA’ Quick Guide: An Evaluation Across Three Australian Healthcare Settings

ABSTRACT

Pressure injuries present significant challenges in clinical care, leading to severe complications such as infection, pain and delayed wound healing. They are a common chronic wound that contribute to increased morbidity, prolonged hospital stays and substantial healthcare costs. Despite national efforts to enhance chronic wound management, development of optimal treatment strategies remains a priority. The Pressure Injury Treatment Advisory (PITA) Quick Guide was developed to provide an evidence-based guide to support clinicians in pressure injury management. A survey was conducted to evaluate clinician perspectives on the usability and practicality of the Guide in acute care, residential aged care and community settings. A post-test survey was conducted on a convenience sample of healthcare professionals from three healthcare settings across metropolitan, regional and rural Australia. The survey included 5-point Likert-scale items assessing ease of use, effectiveness and integration with workflows. Three hundred and two responses were received (66.7% response rate). Clinicians expressed overwhelmingly positive perceptions, with over 95% agreeing or strongly agreeing on the guide's utility and effectiveness. No respondents strongly disagreed with any item. Residential aged care and rural clinicians rated the tool slightly higher than acute care and medical clinicians. The PITA Quick Guide was well-received across all settings, demonstrating strong potential to enhance evidence-based pressure injury management.

Medication Reconciliation in Outpatient Psychiatry: An Indicator of Communication With Primary Care? A Quantitative Descriptive Study

ABSTRACT

Aims

To quantify medication discrepancies between an outpatient psychiatric service and general practitioners in northern France, and investigate general practitioner identification in psychiatric records.

Design

Quantitative, exploratory, retrospective, descriptive, monocentric study.

Method

Study conducted in 2022 on 112 patients, comparing medication lists between the medical and psychological center and general practitioners through medication reconciliation.

Results

Among the 33 patients (29.5%) with complete data allowing medication reconciliation, 84.8% had at least one discrepancy between medication regimens known to the outpatient psychiatric service versus those known to general practitioners. Discrepancies affected both psychiatric (85.7%) and nonpsychiatric medications (78.6%). 18.8% of the 112 patients did not have an identified general practitioner in the outpatient psychiatric records.

Conclusion

Medication reconciliation in outpatient psychiatry can improve treatment safety and create an opportunity for communication between care providers.

Implications

This study highlights opportunities for advanced practice nurses to improve medication safety and interprofessional communication in outpatient psychiatric care through medication reconciliation, which appears to be a reliable indicator for quantitatively assessing communication while actively creating opportunities for dialogue between outpatient psychiatric care facilities and primary care structures. The implementation of these practices could be supported by the advanced practice nurses recently introduced in France, by raising awareness among healthcare professionals, by contributing to the therapeutic education of patients and by supporting the use of digital health tools.

Reporting Method

Compliance with EQUATOR RECORDS guidelines, extended from STROBE statements.

Patient or Public Input

This study did not include patient or public participation in its design, conduct, or reporting.

Exploring the impact of targeted exercise in women experiencing homelessness, addiction and mental health challenges: a mixed-methods feasibility study

Por: Kennedy · F. · Murray · D. · Ni Cheallaigh · C. · Romero-Ortuno · R. · Gavin · S. · Broderick · J.
Objective

Low physical functioning and frailty are prevalent in non-geriatric vulnerable populations such as people experiencing homelessness, addiction and mental health challenges. The objective of this study was to explore the feasibility and impact of a targeted exercise intervention with protein supplementation for women experiencing homelessness, addiction and mental health challenges.

Design

Mixed-methods feasibility study.

Setting

A women’s-only day service for people with homelessness and addiction issues, in Dublin, Ireland.

Participants

Women experiencing homelessness, addiction and mental health challenges.

Interventions

The intervention was a 10-week low-threshold exercise and protein supplementation pre-post programme (LEAP-W). Qualitative interviews were conducted following the intervention with programme participants and key stakeholders.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

The primary outcome was feasibility measured by recruitment, retention, adherence, safety and acceptability, and secondary outcomes measured pre-post intervention change in physical function, pain, nutritional and frailty status, and overall health status.

Results

Overall, 33 participants were recruited. Data generated demonstrated that LEAP-W was feasible by its safety, acceptability and high retention in certain subgroups, and high adherence to the exercise and protein supplement; its impact was demonstrated by pre-post intervention improvement in multiple domains (strength (chair stand test), balance (the single leg stance test), pain and quality of life/mental health (mental component summary of the Short Form-12; 95% CI, p

Conclusion

Targeted exercise interventions with trauma-sensitive, flexible design can be successfully delivered and yield impact in women with complex needs who experience homelessness, addiction and mental health challenges. Service design should be considered when delivering interventions to this population. Further higher-powered longitudinal studies are warranted.

Trial registration number

NCT06264895.

Unwarranted variation in potentially inappropriate medication in general practice: a Danish nationwide register-based cohort study

Por: Paust · A. · Vestergaard · C. H. · Gronkjaer Laugesen · I. · Bro · F. · Mygind · A. · Utoft · N. B. · Prior · A.
Objectives

To examine how the population composition, practice organisation and geographical context of general practice clinics are associated with unwarranted variation in prescribing patterns (variation not explained by patient characteristics), using potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) as an indicator of treatment quality.

Design

A nationwide register-based cohort study.

Setting and population

Data on eligible general practice clinics (1703 clinics) in Denmark and their listed patient populations (4 369 915 individuals) were collected from 1 January to 31 December 2021.

Main outcome measures

Unwarranted variation in PIM was estimated using the clinics’ PIM propensity. PIM propensity in clinics was defined as the ratio between observed and expected PIM incidence among listed patients and was stratified into indicators of underprescribing and overprescribing.

Results

The results demonstrate a 13% difference in PIM propensity between clinics with the highest propensity (90th percentile) and the lowest propensity (10th percentile). When stratifying by underprescribing and overprescribing, we found a relative difference of 12% for underprescribing and 50% for overprescribing between the two groups. Clinics serving male-dominated populations (>55% men 1.11, 95% CI 1.08 to 1.14) and more socially deprived patient populations (deprivation index >40 10.11, 95% CI 1.08 to 1.14) had a higher propensity for overprescribing. Organisational factors associated with overprescribing included single-handed practices (1.08, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.10), smaller patient lists (100 000 citizens: 1.04, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.07). In contrast, disease burden and age distribution in listed patients appeared to have no clinically relevant association with PIM propensity.

Conclusions

This study indicates unwarranted variation in the medical treatment quality, primarily related to overprescribing. Inferior treatment quality was associated with patient composition, practice organisation and geographical context. This emphasises a need for new strategies to address the inverse care law and enhance patient safety.

Health service contacts for mental health and substance use on release from prison: a retrospective population-based data linkage study

Por: Connell · C. · Kjellgren · R. · Savinc · J. · Dougall · N. · Kurdi · A. · Watson · J. · Haddow · C. · Brown · A. · Parkes · T. · Hunt · K.
Background

Mental health and substance use problems among people released from prison contribute substantially to premature mortality and emergency services demand. Understanding of mental health and substance use-related health service contacts prior to these severe and costly outcomes is limited. We assessed mental health and substance use-related contact with multiple services, comparing rates of contact among people released from prison to a matched general population sample who had not recently been in prison.

Objectives

To compare rates of health service contacts for mental health and substance use between people released from prison and a matched general population sample.

Design

We conducted a retrospective cohort study using linked administrative data with nationwide coverage. The cohort contained all people released from any Scottish prison in 2015 (exposed group), and a random general population sample matched (ratio 1:5) on sex, age, postcode and deprivation indices, who had no imprisonment in the 5 years prior (unexposed group). We linked individual-level administrative healthcare (prescriptions, outpatient, inpatient, emergency/unscheduled care: 2010–2020), prison (admissions, releases: 2010–2020) and deaths records (2015–2020). We estimated adjusted incidence rate ratios (aIRRs) with 95% CIs using fixed-effects Poisson regression with cluster-robust standard errors, controlling for time-in-community, pre-index mental health and substance use-related health service contacts, and comorbidities. We stratified models by mental health (MH), substance use (SU) and dual diagnosis (attributable to both MH and SU).

Setting

Scotland.

Results

We linked records for 8313 people released from prison, and 41 213 matched individuals. Mental health and substance use-related contact rates were significantly higher for people released from prison across all services, and particularly for emergency and unscheduled care. aIRRs for ambulance contacts were MH=7.75 (95% CI 5.76 to 10.42), SU=7.58 (95% CI 5.71 to 10.08), dual diagnosis=8.28 (95% CI 6.50 to 10.55); and accident and emergency department contacts were MH=4.88 (95% CI 3.78 to 6.29) and SU=7.98 (95% CI 5.71 to 11.17). aIRRs for community prescriptions were MH=1.80 (95% CI 1.67 to 1.94), SU=5.95 (95% CI 4.83 to 7.32), dual diagnosis=5.33 (95% CI 3.70 to 7.68); drug and alcohol services were 7.13 (95% CI 6.00 to 8.48); and outpatient attendances were 2.61 (95% CI 2.17 to 3.16). aIRRs for 24-hour unscheduled telephone support were MH=7.63 (95% CI 4.93 to 11.83) and SU=8.29 (95% CI 3.99 to 17.22); and out-of-hours general practice were MH=5.14 (95% CI 3.66 to 7.22), SU=5.89 (95% CI 3.11 to 11.14) and dual diagnosis=8.85 (95% CI 2.94 to 26.63). aIRRs for general/acute hospital admissions and day cases were MH=2.97 (95% CI 1.43 to 6.16), SU=7.85 (95% CI 4.42 to 13.91), dual diagnosis=13.11 (95% CI 7.95 to 21.61); and for psychiatric admissions were MH=3.62 (95% CI 2.39 to 5.49), SU=10.74 (95% CI 6.12 to 18.84) and dual diagnosis=7.74 (95% CI 4.30 to 13.94).

Conclusions

Improved post-release mental health and substance use care is vital for individual and public health. Despite elevated rates of contact with community mental health and substance use services, people released from prison have disproportionately high rates of contact with emergency and unscheduled care services. This suggests that early support is either inadequate or not accessed by those in greatest need.

Policymakers and service providers should consider investment in tailored transitional and post-release intervention at individual and population level, to improve health and thus prevent later high-cost service use and avoidable mortality. Our results also suggest high-quality care must be available and accessible beyond the immediate post-release period to permit sustained engagement or engagement at a later date.

Improving School Vaccinations for Adolescents With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities: A Person‐Centred Approach

ABSTRACT

Aims

This article investigates school vaccination for adolescents with intellectual and developmental disability through the lens of person-centred care principles.

Design

This is a theoretical framework analysis in which qualitative interview data were mapped to the principles of a Person-Centred Practice Framework.

Data Sources

Data were drawn from Vax4Health, an empirical study that aims to improve vaccination uptake and experiences for adolescents with disabilities.

Methods

Our four-step process included: identifying elements of the school vaccination programme that relate to the Framework domains; mapping programme capacities and challenges by each domain; identifying key factors influencing person-centredness; and synthesising these key influencing factors into three themes.

Results

We extrapolated three themes: (1) Parents and students expressed strong support for the programme, but there is potential to enhance their participation in vaccination decision-making processes. (2) Nurses bring high levels of motivation, clinical experience, empathy and creativity to vaccinate students, but opportunities remain to enhance disability-specific training and knowledge of individual students' needs. (3) Special schools are committed to supporting families and facilitating the programme, but limited resourcing and unclear responsibilities present challenges that need addressing. We discuss how these themes relate to the five domains of the Framework. Key considerations for vaccination programme improvement towards a more person-centred approach are highlighted.

Conclusion

Applying the Framework to the findings of the Vax4Health study identified a range of opportunities to improve person-centred school-based vaccination for adolescents with IDD. Future research could involve engagement with all stakeholders to co-design interventions aimed at applying person-centred care principles to vaccinating students with IDD.

Impact

The findings from this analysis could be used to inform future implementation research into person-centred approaches to school vaccination aiming for positive outcomes for adolescents with IDD, their families and schools and health professionals.

The self-management support needs of people diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis: a realist review protocol

Por: Fishpool · K. · Silverthorne · C. A. · Brooke · M. · McHugh · N. · Morris · L. · Ovens · J. · Smith · T. · Tillett · W. · Dures · E.
Introduction

Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is a form of inflammatory arthritis linked to psoriasis. Previous research from the UK has found that many people feel unsupported when diagnosed with PsA and lack confidence in managing their condition. This realist review aims to understand what works and does not work for whom and in what circumstances, in relation to healthcare professionals engaging with people to support them in developing self-management skills.

Methods and analysis

This protocol was developed by defining the scope of the review, using a brief directed literature review to support discussion by an expert group of researchers, healthcare professionals and a patient partner. A theoretical domains framework was generated, consisting of nine initial programme theories. These were further refined with input from Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement groups and used to develop a database search strategy.

A systematic search of MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, Emcare and APA PsycINFO will be carried out, supplemented by citation tracking, exploration of grey literature and a mixed methods survey of rheumatology health professionals. Data selection will be performed by a minimum of two reviewers and data from included sources will be extracted using a template. Data will be synthesised narratively with respect to the identified initial programme theories, using these data to refine or refute these theories. This will generate refined programme theories to explain what works for whom and in what circumstances.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethical approval for the health professionals survey was granted through the Research Ethics Committee, University of the West of England (Project ID: 10991848). Outputs will be disseminated to the research community through conference presentations and a peer-reviewed journal article. The strategy for sharing outputs with patients and health professionals will be discussed and agreed with knowledge user groups.

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