Blackwell Rebecca Wright Née, Lowton Karen, Robert Glenn, Grudzen Corita, Grocott Patricia
Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery, King's College London, JCMB, 57 Waterloo Road, London, SE1 8WA, UK.
Department of Sociology, University of Sussex, Freeman Building, Falmer, Brighton, BN1 9RH, UK.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2017 Mar;68:83-94. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2017.01.002. Epub 2017 Jan 11.
Increasing use of emergency departments among older patients with palliative needs has led to the development of several service-level interventions intended to improve care quality. There is little evidence of patient and family involvement in developmental processes, and little is known about the experiences of - and preferences for - palliative care delivery in this setting. Participatory action research seeking to enable collaborative working between patients and staff should enhance the impact of local quality improvement work but has not been widely implemented in such a complex setting.
To critique the feasibility of this methodology as a quality improvement intervention in complex healthcare settings, laying a foundation for future work.
an Emergency Department in a large teaching hospital in the United Kingdom.
Experience-based Co-design incorporating: 150h of nonparticipant observation; semi-structured interviews with 15 staff members about their experiences of palliative care delivery; 5 focus groups with 64 staff members to explore challenges in delivering palliative care; 10 filmed semi-structured interviews with palliative care patients or their family members; a co-design event involving staff, patients and family members.
the study successfully identified quality improvement priorities leading to changes in Emergency Department-palliative care processes. Further outputs were the creation of a patient-family-staff experience training DVD to encourage reflective discussion and the identification and application of generic design principles for improving palliative care in the Emergency Department. There were benefits and challenges associated with using Experience-based Co-design in this setting. Benefits included the flexibility of the approach, the high levels of engagement and responsiveness of patients, families and staff, and the impact of using filmed narrative interviews to enhance the 'voice' of seldom heard patients and families. Challenges included high levels of staff turnover during the 19 month project, significant time constraints in the Emergency Department and the ability of older patients and their families to fully participate in the co-design process.
Experience-based Co-design is a useful approach for encouraging collaborative working between vulnerable patients, family and staff in complex healthcare environments. The flexibility of the approach allows the specific needs of participants to be accounted for, enabling fuller engagement with those who typically may not be invited to contribute to quality improvement work. Recommendations for future studies in this and similar settings include testing the 'accelerated' form of the approach and experimenting with alternative ways of increasing involvement of patients/families in the co-design phase.
姑息治疗需求较大的老年患者对急诊科的使用日益增加,这促使人们开展了多项旨在提高护理质量的服务层面干预措施。几乎没有证据表明患者及其家属参与了这些干预措施的开发过程,而且对于这种情况下姑息治疗的体验和偏好知之甚少。旨在促进患者与工作人员协作的参与式行动研究应能增强地方质量改进工作的影响,但在如此复杂的环境中尚未得到广泛实施。
评估这种方法作为复杂医疗环境中质量改进干预措施的可行性,为未来工作奠定基础。
英国一家大型教学医院的急诊科。
基于经验的协同设计,包括:150小时的非参与观察;对15名工作人员进行半结构化访谈,了解他们提供姑息治疗的经验;与64名工作人员进行5次焦点小组讨论,探讨提供姑息治疗的挑战;对10名姑息治疗患者或其家属进行拍摄的半结构化访谈;一次由工作人员、患者和家属参与的协同设计活动。
该研究成功确定了质量改进的重点,从而改变了急诊科姑息治疗流程。进一步的成果包括制作了一张患者-家属-工作人员体验培训DVD,以鼓励反思性讨论,以及确定并应用通用设计原则来改善急诊科的姑息治疗。在这种情况下使用基于经验的协同设计既有好处也有挑战。好处包括该方法的灵活性、患者、家属和工作人员的高度参与度和响应能力,以及使用拍摄的叙事访谈来增强很少被倾听患者和家属“声音”的影响。挑战包括在为期19个月的项目期间工作人员流动率高、急诊科存在重大时间限制以及老年患者及其家属充分参与协同设计过程的能力。
基于经验的协同设计是鼓励脆弱患者、家属和工作人员在复杂医疗环境中开展协作的有用方法。该方法的灵活性允许考虑参与者的具体需求,使那些通常可能未被邀请参与质量改进工作的人能更充分地参与进来。针对在此及类似环境中未来研究的建议包括测试该方法的“加速”形式,并尝试采用替代方法增加患者/家属在协同设计阶段的参与度。