VA Greater Los Angeles Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation & Policy (CSHIIP), North Hills, California; Department of Medicine, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California; VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, California.
VA Greater Los Angeles Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation & Policy (CSHIIP), North Hills, California; VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, California.
Womens Health Issues. 2022 May-Jun;32(3):284-292. doi: 10.1016/j.whi.2021.12.003. Epub 2022 Jan 31.
Cardiovascular (CV) disease is the leading cause of death among women in the United States, making CV risk screening and management a women's health priority. Objectives were to elicit barriers and facilitators to CV risk identification and reduction among women veterans, and iteratively cocreate clinical tools to identify CV risk factors and promote goal-setting for lifestyle changes.
We conducted three exploratory focus groups with 21 Veterans Health Administration primary care team members and piloted patient CV screeners with brief interviews with 19 patients from two Veterans Health Administration women's clinics to inform toolkit development. We then conducted two focus groups and one interview for feedback from a total of 12 staff on the proposed toolkit components. Transcripts were summarized, and a matrix analysis was used to synthesize qualitative findings.
Provider-identified barriers included difficulties disseminating CV information in clinic, limited patient knowledge, and lack of organized resources for provider communication and available referrals. Women's complex health needs were notable challenges to CV risk reduction. Facilitators included having a single place to track patient CV risks (e.g., an electronic template note), a patient screening worksheet, and aids to complete referrals. Patient-identified barriers included difficulties balancing health, finances, and physical and mental health concerns. Facilitators included resources for accountability and gender-specific information about CV risks and complications. Providers requested easy, accessible tools in the electronic record with gender-specific CV data and resources linked. Patients requested lifestyle change supports, including trustworthy sources vetted by providers.
Iteratively eliciting end-users' perspectives is critical to developing user-friendly, clinically relevant tools. CV risk reduction among women veterans will require multilevel tools and resources that meet providers' and women's needs.
心血管疾病是美国女性死亡的主要原因,因此对女性进行心血管风险筛查和管理成为了女性健康的重点。本研究旨在探讨退伍女军人中心血管风险识别和降低的障碍和促进因素,并迭代式创建临床工具以识别心血管风险因素并促进生活方式改变目标的设定。
我们共进行了三次探索性焦点小组,参与者为 21 名退伍军人医疗保健管理局(Veterans Health Administration,VHA)初级保健团队成员,并与两家 VHA 女性诊所的 19 名患者进行了简短的患者心血管筛查访谈,以了解工具包的开发情况。随后,我们对共 12 名工作人员进行了两次焦点小组和一次访谈,以提供有关工具包组件的反馈。对转录内容进行了总结,并使用矩阵分析对定性发现进行了综合。
提供者识别出的障碍包括在诊所中传播心血管信息困难、患者知识有限以及缺乏用于提供者沟通和可用转诊的有组织资源。女性复杂的健康需求是降低心血管风险的重大挑战。促进因素包括有一个跟踪患者心血管风险的单一位置(例如,电子模板记录)、患者筛查工作表和完成转诊的辅助工具。患者识别出的障碍包括在平衡健康、财务、身心健康问题方面存在困难。促进因素包括问责制资源以及针对心血管风险和并发症的特定于性别的信息。提供者要求在电子记录中使用方便、可访问的工具,这些工具应具有特定于性别的心血管数据和链接的资源。患者要求获得生活方式改变支持,包括提供者审核过的可信来源。
迭代式征求最终用户的意见对于开发用户友好、具有临床相关性的工具至关重要。女性退伍军人的心血管风险降低需要满足提供者和女性需求的多层次工具和资源。