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在初级保健会诊期间让患有多种疾病的老年患者参与决策的干预措施。

Interventions for involving older patients with multi-morbidity in decision-making during primary care consultations.

作者信息

Butterworth Joanne E, Hays Rebecca, McDonagh Sinead Tj, Richards Suzanne H, Bower Peter, Campbell John

机构信息

University of Exeter Medical School, University of Exeter Collaboration for Academic Primary Care (APEx), Smeall Building, St Luke's Campus, Exeter, Devon, UK, EX1 2LU.

University of Manchester, NIHR School for Primary Care Research, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Division of Population Health, Health Services Research and Primary Care, 5th Floor, Williamson Building, Oxford Road, Manchester, UK, M13 9PL.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Oct 28;2019(10):CD013124. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013124.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Older patients with multiple health problems (multi-morbidity) value being involved in decision-making about their health care. However, they are less frequently involved than younger patients. To maximise quality of life, day-to-day function, and patient safety, older patients require support to identify unmet healthcare needs and to prioritise treatment options.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the effects of interventions for older patients with multi-morbidity aiming to involve them in decision-making about their health care during primary care consultations.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; all years to August 2018), in the Cochrane Library; MEDLINE (OvidSP) (1966 to August 2018); Embase (OvidSP) (1988 to August 2018); PsycINFO (OvidSP) (1806 to August 2018); the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (Ovid) (1982 to September 2008), then in Ebsco (2009 to August 2018); Centre for Reviews and Dissemination Databases (Database of Abstracts and Reviews of Effects (DARE)) (all years to August 2018); the Health Technology Assessment (HTA) Database (all years to August 2018); the Ongoing Reviews Database (all years to August 2018); and Dissertation Abstracts International (1861 to August 2018).

SELECTION CRITERIA

We sought randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster-RCTs, and quasi-RCTs of interventions to involve patients in decision-making about their health care versus usual care/control/another intervention, for patients aged 65 years and older with multi-morbidity in primary care.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We used standard Cochrane methodological procedures. Meta-analysis was not possible; therefore we prepared a narrative synthesis.

MAIN RESULTS

We included three studies involving 1879 participants: two RCTs and one cluster-RCT. Interventions consisted of: · patient workshop and individual coaching using behaviour change techniques; · individual patient coaching utilising cognitive-behavioural therapy and motivational interviewing; and · holistic patient review, multi-disciplinary practitioner training, and organisational change. No studies reported the primary outcome 'patient involvement in decision-making' or the primary adverse outcome 'less patient involvement as a result of the intervention'. Comparing interventions (patient workshop and individual coaching, holistic patient review plus practitioner training, and organisational change) to usual care: we are uncertain whether interventions had any effect on patient reports of high self-rated health (risk ratio (RR) 1.40, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.36 to 5.49; very low-certainty evidence) or on patient enablement (mean difference (MD) 0.60, 95% CI -9.23 to 10.43; very low-certainty evidence) compared with usual care. Interventions probably had no effect on health-related quality of life (adjusted difference in means 0.00, 95% CI -0.02 to 0.02; moderate-certainty evidence) or on medication adherence (MD 0.06, 95% CI -0.05 to 0.17; moderate-certainty evidence) but probably improved the number of patients discussing their priorities (adjusted odds ratio 1.85, 95% CI 1.44 to 2.38; moderate-certainty evidence) and probably increased the number of nurse consultations (incident rate ratio from adjusted multi-level Poisson model 1.37, 95% CI 1.17 to 1.61; moderate-certainty evidence) compared with usual care. Practitioner outcomes were not measured. Interventions were not reported to adversely affect rates of participant death or anxiety, emergency department attendance, or hospital admission compared with usual care. Comparing interventions (patient workshop and coaching, individual patient coaching) to attention-control conditions: we are uncertain whether interventions affect patient-reported high self-rated health (RR 0.38, 95% CI 0.15 to 1.00, favouring attention control, with very low-certainty evidence; RR 2.17, 95% CI 0.85 to 5.52, favouring the intervention, with very low-certainty evidence). We are uncertain whether interventions affect patient enablement and engagement by increasing either patient activation (MD 1.20, 95% CI -8.21 to 10.61; very low-certainty evidence) or self-efficacy (MD 0.29, 95% CI -0.21 to 0.79; very low-certainty evidence); or whether interventions affect the number of general practice visits (MD 0.51, 95% CI -0.34 to 1.36; very low-certainty evidence), compared to attention-control conditions. The intervention may however lead to more patient-reported changes in management of their health conditions (RR 1.82, 95% CI 1.35 to 2.44; low-certainty evidence). Practitioner outcomes were not measured. Interventions were not reported to adversely affect emergency department attendance nor hospital admission when compared with attention control. Comparing one form of intervention with another: not measured. There was 'unclear' risk across studies for performance bias, detection bias, and reporting bias; however, no aspects were 'high' risk. Evidence was downgraded via GRADE, most often because of 'small sample size' and 'evidence from a single study'.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Limited available evidence does not allow a robust conclusion regarding the objectives of this review. Whilst patient involvement in decision-making is seen as a key mechanism for improving care, it is rarely examined as an intervention and was not measured by included studies. Consistency in design, analysis, and evaluation of interventions would enable a greater likelihood of robust conclusions in future reviews.

摘要

背景

患有多种健康问题(共病)的老年患者重视参与有关其医疗保健的决策。然而,与年轻患者相比,他们参与决策的频率较低。为了使生活质量、日常功能和患者安全最大化,老年患者需要得到支持,以识别未满足的医疗需求并对治疗方案进行优先排序。

目的

评估针对患有共病的老年患者的干预措施的效果,这些干预措施旨在使他们在初级保健咨询期间参与有关其医疗保健的决策。

检索方法

我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL;截至2018年8月的所有年份),该库收录于Cochrane图书馆;MEDLINE(OvidSP)(1966年至2018年8月);Embase(OvidSP)(1988年至2018年8月);PsycINFO(OvidSP)(1806年至2018年8月);护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)(Ovid)(1982年至2008年9月),然后在Ebsco中检索(2009年至2018年8月);综述与传播中心数据库(效果摘要与综述数据库(DARE))(截至2018年8月的所有年份);卫生技术评估(HTA)数据库(截至2018年8月的所有年份);正在进行的综述数据库(截至2018年8月的所有年份);以及国际学位论文摘要数据库(1861年至2018年8月)。

选择标准

我们寻找随机对照试验(RCT)、整群RCT和准RCT,这些试验针对65岁及以上患有共病的初级保健患者,比较让患者参与医疗保健决策的干预措施与常规护理/对照/另一种干预措施。

数据收集与分析

我们采用标准的Cochrane方法学程序。无法进行荟萃分析;因此我们进行了叙述性综合分析。

主要结果

我们纳入了三项研究,涉及1879名参与者:两项RCT和一项整群RCT。干预措施包括:· 使用行为改变技术的患者工作坊和个体辅导;· 利用认知行为疗法和动机性访谈的个体患者辅导;以及· 全面的患者评估、多学科从业者培训和组织变革。没有研究报告主要结局“患者参与决策”或主要不良结局“因干预导致患者参与度降低”。将干预措施(患者工作坊和个体辅导、全面的患者评估加从业者培训以及组织变革)与常规护理进行比较:我们不确定干预措施对患者自我评定健康状况良好的报告是否有任何影响(风险比(RR)1.40, 95%置信区间(CI)0.36至5.49;极低确定性证据),或者与常规护理相比,对患者赋能是否有影响(平均差(MD)0.60, 95% CI -9.23至10.43;极低确定性证据)。干预措施可能对健康相关生活质量没有影响(调整后的均值差0.00, 95% CI -0.02至0.02;中等确定性证据)或对药物依从性没有影响(MD 0.06, 95% CI -0.05至0.17;中等确定性证据),但可能增加了讨论其优先事项的患者数量(调整后的优势比1.85, 95% CI 1.44至2.38;中等确定性证据),并且与常规护理相比,可能增加了护士会诊的次数(调整后的多水平泊松模型的发病率比1.37, 95% CI 1.17至1.61;中等确定性证据)。未测量从业者结局。与常规护理相比,未报告干预措施对参与者死亡率、焦虑、急诊就诊率或住院率有不利影响。将干预措施(患者工作坊和辅导、个体患者辅导)与注意力控制组进行比较:我们不确定干预措施是否影响患者报告的自我评定健康状况良好(RR 0.38, 95% CI 0.1

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