SAPPHIRE, Department of Health Sciences, College of Life Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Health Service & Population Research Department, King's College London, London, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Dec 8;12(12):CD012829. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012829.pub2.
There is now a rising commitment to acknowledge the role patients and families play in contributing to their safety. This review focuses on one type of involvement in safety - patient and family involvement in escalation of care for serious life-threatening conditions i.e. helping secure a step-up to urgent or emergency care - which has been receiving increasing policy and practice attention. This review was concerned with the negotiation work that patient and family members undertake across the emergency care escalation pathway, once contact has been made with healthcare staff. It includes interventions aiming to improve detection of symptoms, communication of concerns and staff response to these concerns.
To assess the effects of interventions designed to increase patient and family involvement in escalation of care for acute life-threatening illness on patient and family outcomes, treatment outcomes, clinical outcomes, patient and family experience and adverse events.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, MEDLINE (OvidSP), Embase (OvidSP), PsycINFO (OvidSP) ClinicalTrials.gov and the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trials Registry Platform from 1 Jan 2000 to 24 August 2018. The search was updated on 21 October 2019.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and cluster-randomised controlled trials where the intervention focused on patients and families working with healthcare professionals to ensure care received for acute deterioration was timely and appropriate. A key criterion was to include an interactive element of rehearsal, role play, modelling, shared language, group work etc. to the intervention to help patients and families have agency in the process of escalation of care. The interventions included components such as enabling patients and families to detect changes in patients' conditions and to speak up about these changes to staff. We also included studies where the intervention included a component targeted at enabling staff response.
Seven of the eight authors were involved in screening; two review authors independently extracted data and assessed the risk of bias of included studies, with any disagreements resolved by discussion to reach consensus. Primary outcomes included patient and family outcomes, treatment outcomes, clinical outcomes, patient and family experience and adverse events. Our advisory group (four users and four providers) ensured that the review was of relevance and could inform policy and practice.
We included nine studies involving 436,684 patients and family members and one ongoing study. The published studies focused on patients with specific conditions such as coronary artery disease, ischaemic stroke, and asthma, as well as pregnant women, inpatients on medical surgical wards, older adults and high-risk patients with a history of poor self-management. While all studies tested interventions versus usual care, for four studies the usual care group also received educational or information strategies. Seven of the interventions involved face-to-face, interactional education/coaching sessions aimed at patients/families while two provided multi-component education programmes which included components targeted at staff as well as patients/families. All of the interventions included: (1) an educational component about the acute condition and preparedness for future events such as stroke or change in fetal movements: (2) an engagement element (self-monitoring, action plans); while two additionally focused on shared language or communication skills. We had concerns about risk of bias for all but one of the included studies in respect of one or more criteria, particularly regarding blinding of participants and personnel. Our confidence in results regarding the effectiveness of interventions was moderate to low. Low-certainty evidence suggests that there may be moderate improvement in patients' knowledge of acute life-threatening conditions, danger signs, appropriate care-seeking responses, and preparedness capacity between interactional patient-facing interventions and multi-component programmes and usual care at 12 months (MD 4.20, 95% CI 2.44 to 5.97, 2 studies, 687 participants). Four studies in total assessed knowledge (3,086 participants) but we were unable to include two other studies in the pooled analysis due to differences in the way outcome measures were reported. One found no improvement in knowledge but higher symptom preparedness at 12 months. The other study found an improvement in patients' knowledge about symptoms and appropriate care-seeking responses in the intervention group at 18 months compared with usual care. Low-certainty evidence from two studies, each using a different measure, meant that we were unable to determine the effects of patient-based interventions on self-efficacy. Self-efficacy was higher in the intervention group in one study but there was no difference in the other compared with usual care. We are uncertain whether interactional patient-facing and multi-component programmes improve time from the start of patient symptoms to treatment due to low-certainty evidence for this outcome. We were unable to combine the data due to differences in outcome measures. Three studies found that arrival times or prehospital delay time was no different between groups. One found that delay time was shorter in the intervention group. Moderate-certainty evidence suggests that multi-component interventions probably have little or no impact on mortality rates. Only one study on a pregnant population was eligible for inclusion in the review, which found no difference between groups in rates of stillbirth. In terms of unintended events, we found that interactional patient-facing interventions to increase patient and family involvement in escalation of care probably have few adverse effects on patient's anxiety levels (moderate-certainty evidence). None of the studies measured or reported patient and family perceptions of involvement in escalation of care or patient and family experience of patient care. Reported outcomes related to healthcare professionals were also not reported in any studies.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Our review identified that interactional patient-facing interventions and multi-component programmes (including staff) to increase patient and family involvement in escalation of care for acute life-threatening illness may improve patient and family knowledge about danger signs and care-seeking responses, and probably have few adverse effects on patient's anxiety levels when compared to usual care. Multi-component interventions probably have little impact on mortality rates. Further high-quality trials are required using multi-component interventions and a focus on relational elements of care. Cognitive and behavioural outcomes should be included at patient and staff level.
现在越来越重视承认患者和家属在促进安全方面所起的作用。本综述重点关注参与严重危及生命的疾病的治疗升级的一种类型的参与,即帮助确保升级为紧急或紧急护理,这一主题已经受到越来越多的政策和实践关注。本综述关注的是在与医疗保健人员联系后,患者和家属在整个紧急护理升级途径中所进行的谈判工作。它包括旨在提高症状检测、沟通关注点以及员工对这些关注点的反应的干预措施。
评估旨在增加急性危及生命的疾病的患者和家属参与治疗升级的干预措施对患者和家属结局、治疗结局、临床结局、患者和家属体验以及不良事件的影响。
我们检索了 Cochrane 中心对照试验注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE(OvidSP)、Embase(OvidSP)、PsycINFO(OvidSP)、ClinicalTrials.gov 和世界卫生组织(WHO)国际临床试验注册平台,检索时间从 2000 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 8 月 24 日。2019 年 10 月 21 日更新了检索。
我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)和集群随机对照试验,这些试验的干预措施侧重于患者和家属与医疗保健专业人员合作,以确保接受的急性恶化护理及时且适当。一个关键标准是将排练、角色扮演、建模、共享语言、小组工作等互动元素纳入干预措施,以帮助患者和家属在治疗升级过程中拥有主动权。这些干预措施包括使患者和家属能够检测到患者病情变化并向工作人员报告这些变化的内容。我们还纳入了研究,这些研究的干预措施包括使工作人员能够做出反应的组成部分。
8 位作者中的 7 位参与了筛选;2 位综述作者独立提取数据,并对纳入研究的风险偏倚进行评估,任何分歧均通过讨论解决,以达成共识。主要结局包括患者和家属结局、治疗结局、临床结局、患者和家属体验以及不良事件。我们的顾问小组(4 位使用者和 4 位提供者)确保了综述的相关性,并能够为政策和实践提供信息。
我们纳入了 9 项研究,涉及 436684 名患者和家属,还有一项正在进行的研究。已发表的研究集中在特定疾病(如冠状动脉疾病、缺血性中风和哮喘)以及孕妇、内科和外科病房的住院患者、老年人和自我管理不良病史的高危患者。虽然所有研究都测试了干预措施与常规护理,但对于四项研究,常规护理组也接受了教育或信息策略。七种干预措施都涉及针对患者/家属的面对面、互动式教育/辅导课程,而另外两种则提供了多组分教育计划,其中包括针对患者/家属和工作人员的部分。所有的干预措施都包括:(1)有关急性疾病和为未来事件(如中风或胎儿运动变化)做好准备的教育组成部分;(2)参与要素(自我监测、行动计划);而其中两项还专注于共享语言或沟通技巧。我们对所有纳入研究的偏倚风险都有顾虑,但只有一项研究存在一个或多个标准的偏倚风险,特别是在参与者和人员的盲法方面。我们对干预措施有效性的结果的信心是中等至低等,因为存在高偏倚风险。低确定性证据表明,与常规护理相比,互动式面向患者的干预措施和多组分计划可能会在 12 个月时适度改善患者对危及生命的急性疾病、危险信号、适当寻求护理的反应以及准备能力(MD 4.20,95%CI 2.44 至 5.97,2 项研究,687 名参与者)。四项研究共评估了知识(3086 名参与者),但由于报告结果的方式不同,我们无法将另外两项研究纳入汇总分析。一项研究发现,12 个月时,症状准备度更高,但知识没有提高。另一项研究发现,与常规护理相比,18 个月时患者对症状和适当的护理寻求反应的知识有所提高。由于采用了不同的措施,两项研究的低确定性证据意味着我们无法确定以患者为基础的干预措施对自我效能的影响。一项研究中,干预组的自我效能更高,但另一项研究与常规护理相比没有差异。由于对该结局的证据质量较低,我们无法确定互动式面向患者的干预措施和多组分计划是否能改善从患者症状开始到治疗的时间。由于结局测量不同,我们无法合并数据。三项研究发现,到达时间或院前延迟时间在各组之间没有差异。一项研究发现,干预组的延迟时间更短。中等确定性证据表明,多组分干预措施可能对死亡率影响很小或没有影响。只有一项针对孕妇的研究符合纳入综述的条件,该研究发现两组之间的死产率没有差异。在不良事件方面,我们发现增加患者和家属参与治疗升级的互动式面向患者的干预措施可能对患者的焦虑水平产生很少或没有不良影响(中等确定性证据)。没有研究测量或报告患者和家属对参与治疗升级的看法或患者和家属对患者护理的体验。报告的与医疗保健专业人员相关的结果也没有在任何研究中报告。
我们的综述发现,与常规护理相比,增加急性危及生命的疾病的患者和家属参与治疗升级的互动式面向患者的干预措施和多组分计划(包括工作人员)可能会在 12 个月时适度改善患者和家属对危险信号和寻求护理的反应的知识,并且可能对患者的焦虑水平产生很少或没有不良影响。多组分干预措施可能对死亡率影响很小。需要进一步开展高质量的试验,采用多组分干预措施,并注重护理关系方面。应在患者和工作人员层面纳入认知和行为结局。