Gilmore-Bykovskyi Andrea, Cotton Quinton, Morgan Jennifer, Block Laura
Nursing, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
BMJ Open. 2021 Feb 5;11(2):e043016. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-043016.
People living with dementia (PLWD) are more likely to experience hospitalisation events (hospitalisation, rehospitalisation) than those without dementia. Many hospitalisation events, particularly rehospitalisation within 30 days of discharge, are thought to be avoidable. Yet our understanding of dementia-specific risk and protective factors surrounding avoidable hospitalisation is limited to specific intersetting transitions and predominantly clinician perspectives. Broader insights are needed to design accessible and effective solutions for reducing avoidable hospitalisations. We have designed the Stakeholders Understanding of Prevention Protection and Opportunities to Reduce HospiTalizations (SUPPORT) Study to address these gaps. The objectives of the SUPPORT Study are to elicit and examine family caregiver, community and hospital providers' perspectives on avoidable hospitalisation events among PLWD, and to identify opportunities for effective prevention.
We will conduct a multisite, descriptive qualitative study to interview around 100 family caregivers, community and hospital providers. We will identify and sample from regions and communities with higher socio-contextual disadvantage and hospital utilisation, and will aim to recruit individuals representing diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds. Interviews will follow a descriptive qualitative design in conjunction with constant comparison techniques to sample divergent situations and events. We will employ a range of analytical approaches to address specific research questions including thematic (inductive and deductive), comparative and dimensional analysis. Interviews will be conducted individually or in focus groups and follow a semistructured interview guide.
The study is approved by the University of Wisconsin-Madison Institutional Review Board. Informed consent procedures will incorporate steps to evaluate capacity to provide informed consent in the event that participants express concerns with thinking or memory or demonstrate challenges recalling study details during the consent process to ensure capacity to consent to participation. A series of publicly available reports, seminars and symposia will be undertaken in collaboration with collaborating organisation partners.
与无痴呆症者相比,痴呆症患者(PLWD)更有可能经历住院事件(住院、再次住院)。许多住院事件,尤其是出院后30天内的再次住院,被认为是可以避免的。然而,我们对围绕可避免住院的痴呆症特定风险和保护因素的理解仅限于特定的机构间转诊,且主要是临床医生的观点。需要更广泛的见解来设计可及且有效的解决方案,以减少可避免的住院情况。我们设计了利益相关者对预防、保护及减少住院机会的理解(SUPPORT)研究,以填补这些空白。SUPPORT研究的目标是引出并审视家庭照顾者、社区及医院提供者对PLWD中可避免住院事件的看法,并确定有效预防的机会。
我们将开展一项多地点、描述性定性研究,访谈约100名家庭照顾者、社区及医院提供者。我们将从社会背景劣势较高且医院利用率较高的地区和社区中识别并抽样,目标是招募代表不同种族/族裔背景的个体。访谈将采用描述性定性设计,并结合持续比较技术,以抽样不同的情况和事件。我们将采用一系列分析方法来解决特定的研究问题,包括主题分析(归纳和演绎)、比较分析和维度分析。访谈将单独进行或在焦点小组中进行,并遵循半结构化访谈指南。
该研究已获得威斯康星大学麦迪逊分校机构审查委员会的批准。知情同意程序将纳入一些步骤,以便在参与者在同意过程中对思维或记忆表示担忧或在回忆研究细节方面表现出困难时,评估其提供知情同意的能力,以确保其有能力同意参与研究。将与合作组织伙伴合作开展一系列公开报告、研讨会和专题讨论会。