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让服务使用者参与患者叙述的定性分析,以支持医疗质量改进。

Involving service users in the qualitative analysis of patient narratives to support healthcare quality improvement.

作者信息

Locock Louise, Kirkpatrick Susan, Brading Lucy, Sturmey Gordon, Cornwell Jocelyn, Churchill Neil, Robert Glenn

机构信息

1Health Services Research Unit, University of Aberdeen (Formerly University of Oxford), Health Sciences Building, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, AB25 2ZD Scotland.

2Health Experiences Research Group, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Woodstock Rd, Oxford, OX2 6GG England.

出版信息

Res Involv Engagem. 2019 Jan 3;5:1. doi: 10.1186/s40900-018-0133-z. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY

Patient or user involvement in health research is well-established but is often limited to advising on research questions and design, leaving researchers to collect and analyse 'data' (which in this paper means written copies of interviews with patients about their experiences). We were working with sets of interviews with 1) young people with depression and 2) people with experiences of stroke. We were looking for key themes that it would be useful for the NHS to know about, and we developed short films which healthcare staff can use to think about how to make care more patient-centred. We wanted to see what user involvement in this analysis would bring, and how best to achieve it practically.After the researcher team had analysed the interviews, we ran two one-day workshops with people with relevant experience as a patient/service user or carer. We gave them some brief training in how to analyse interviews and how they might be used for improving the quality of care. Then we looked at extracts from the interviews, and discussed whether people could see the same themes as the researcher.People identified similar themes to the researcher, but also identified new details the researcher had missed. However, they felt reading large amounts of text was not the best way to use their time and experience. Instead they recommended that a better approach would be for a researcher to meet with a group of users at the start of analysis, to discuss what to look out for.

ABSTRACT

Patient or user involvement in health research is a well-established principle. However, involvement is often limited to advising on research questions and design, leaving researchers to complete data collection and analysis. Involvement in data analysis is one of the most challenging, least well-explored aspects of involvement. Qualitative interview data forms high volumes of rich, complex material which can be daunting to work with.Analysing narrative interviews with patients is central to a patient-centred quality improvement method called experience-based co-design. The analysis identifies 'touchpoints' - key moments of healthcare experiences - and leads to the production of a 'trigger film' to spark codesign discussions between patients and staff. We wanted to see what user involvement in this analysis would bring, and how best to achieve it. As part of a wider secondary analysis study to create new trigger films, we re-analysed interview transcripts on experiences of young people with depression and experiences of stroke. We then ran two workshops with people with relevant lived experience, working with extracts from the same materials after brief training. People involved in the workshops identified similar themes to the researcher, but also brought some new insights. While they engaged easily with the materials selected, we under-estimated how much time it would take people to work through these. Discussion and sharing experiences and perspectives were highly valued in the first workshop. In the second workshop, we therefore started with group discussion, based on people's own experience, of what they thought the touchpoints would be, and later viewed a draft trigger film together to see how it compared. Those involved felt that while analysing transcripts was possible in small quantities, it was not best use of their time. We suggest that conversation, rather than data, is at the heart of user involvement in analysis. One way to retain the value of lived experience in the analytic process, without over-burdening people with data, is to elicit user reflections on their experience at the start of analysis, and use this as a guide to direct both researcher and service user attention during the remainder of the process.

摘要

通俗易懂的总结

患者或用户参与健康研究已得到充分确立,但通常仅限于就研究问题和设计提供建议,而让研究人员负责收集和分析“数据”(在本文中,“数据”指患者关于自身经历的访谈文字记录)。我们当时正在处理两组访谈,一组是关于1)患有抑郁症的年轻人,另一组是关于2)有中风经历的人。我们在寻找一些对英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)来说了解后会很有用的关键主题,并制作了短片,医护人员可以用这些短片来思考如何让护理更以患者为中心。我们想看看用户参与这种分析会带来什么,以及如何在实际中最好地实现这一点。

在研究团队分析完访谈后,我们与有相关经历的患者/服务用户或护理人员举办了两次为期一天的研讨会。我们对他们进行了一些关于如何分析访谈以及如何将访谈用于改善护理质量的简短培训。然后我们查看了访谈的摘录,并讨论人们是否能看出与研究人员相同的主题。

人们识别出了与研究人员相似的主题,但也发现了研究人员遗漏的新细节。然而,他们觉得阅读大量文本并非利用他们时间和经验的最佳方式。相反,他们建议更好的方法是研究人员在分析开始时与一组用户会面,讨论要留意什么。

摘要

患者或用户参与健康研究是一项已确立的原则。然而,参与往往仅限于就研究问题和设计提供建议,让研究人员去完成数据收集和分析。参与数据分析是参与过程中最具挑战性、探索最少的方面之一。定性访谈数据形成了大量丰富、复杂的材料,处理起来可能令人望而生畏。

分析与患者的叙事访谈是一种以患者为中心的质量改进方法——基于经验的协同设计的核心。该分析识别出“接触点”——医疗保健经历的关键时刻,并促成制作一部“触发影片”,以激发患者和工作人员之间的协同设计讨论。我们想看看用户参与这种分析会带来什么,以及如何最好地实现这一点。作为一项更广泛的二次分析研究以制作新的触发影片的一部分,我们重新分析了关于患有抑郁症的年轻人的经历和中风经历的访谈记录。然后我们与有相关生活经历的人举办了两次研讨会,在简短培训后让他们处理相同材料的摘录。

参与研讨会的人识别出了与研究人员相似的主题,但也带来了一些新见解。虽然他们很容易参与到所选材料中,但我们低估了人们处理这些材料需要花费的时间。在第一次研讨会上,讨论以及分享经验和观点受到高度重视。因此,在第二次研讨会上,我们首先基于人们自己的经历进行小组讨论,讨论他们认为接触点会是什么,之后一起观看一部触发影片草稿,看看两者的比较情况。参与的人觉得虽然少量分析访谈记录是可行的,但这并非利用他们时间的最佳方式。我们建议,对话而非数据才是用户参与分析的核心。在分析过程中保留生活经历价值的一种方法,同时又不让人们被数据过度 burden(此处原文可能有误,推测为burdened),就是在分析开始时引出用户对其经历的反思,并将此用作在过程的剩余部分引导研究人员和服务用户注意力的指南。

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