Association for Dementia Studies, University of Worcester, Worcester, UK.
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, Oxford University, Oxford, UK.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jul 7;11(7):e047789. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047789.
Community-based support for people with earlier-stage dementia and their care partners, such as regularly meeting groups and activities, can play an important part in postdiagnostic care. Typically delivered piecemeal in the UK, by a variety of agencies with inconsistent funding, provision is fragmented and many such interventions struggle to continue after only a short start-up period. This realist review investigates what can promote or hinder such interventions in being able to sustain long term.
Key sources of evidence were gathered using formal searches of electronic databases and grey literature, together with informal search methods such as citation tracking. No restrictions were made on article type or study design; only data pertaining to regularly meeting, ongoing, community-based interventions were included. Data were extracted, assessed, organised and synthesised and a realist logic of analysis applied to trace context-mechanism-outcome configurations as part an overall programme theory. Consultation with stakeholders, involved with a variety of such interventions, informed this process throughout.
Ability to continually get and keep members; staff and volunteers; the support of other services and organisations; and funding/income were found to be critical, with multiple mechanisms feeding into these suboutcomes, sensitive to context. These included an emphasis on socialising and person-centredness; lowering stigma and logistical barriers; providing support and recognition for personnel; networking, raising awareness and sharing with other organisations, while avoiding conflict; and skilled financial planning and management.
This review presents a theoretical model of what is involved in the long-term sustainability of community-based interventions. Alongside the need for longer-term funding and skilled financial management, key factors include the need for stigma-free, person-centred provision, sensitive to members' diversity and social needs, as well as the need for a robust support network including the local community, health and care services. Challenges were especially acute for small scale and rural groups.
以社区为基础,为早期痴呆症患者及其护理人员提供支持,例如定期举办小组活动,这在诊断后护理中发挥着重要作用。在英国,这些支持通常是由各种机构零碎提供的,资金来源不一致,服务分散,许多干预措施在启动后很短的时间内就难以持续。本真实主义综述调查了哪些因素可以促进或阻碍这些干预措施长期持续。
通过正式搜索电子数据库和灰色文献,以及非正式搜索方法(如引文追踪),收集了主要证据来源。对文章类型或研究设计没有任何限制;仅包括定期召开、持续进行、以社区为基础的干预措施的数据。对数据进行提取、评估、组织和综合,并应用真实主义分析逻辑,追踪背景-机制-结果配置,作为总体方案理论的一部分。在整个过程中,与各种此类干预措施相关的利益相关者的咨询为这一过程提供了信息。
发现持续招募和保留成员、工作人员和志愿者;获得其他服务和组织的支持;以及资金/收入是至关重要的,这些结果受到多种机制的影响,对环境因素敏感。这些机制包括强调社交和以人为本;降低耻辱感和后勤障碍;为人员提供支持和认可;与其他组织建立网络、提高认识和共享资源,同时避免冲突;以及熟练的财务规划和管理。
本综述提出了一个关于社区为基础的干预措施长期可持续性所涉及因素的理论模型。除了需要长期资金和熟练的财务管理外,关键因素还包括需要无耻辱感、以人为本的服务,要敏感地考虑到成员的多样性和社会需求,以及需要一个包括当地社区、卫生和保健服务在内的强大支持网络。小型和农村组织面临的挑战尤为严峻。