Canadian Centre for Rural and Agricultural Health, University of Saskatchewan, 104 Clinic Place, Box 23, Saskatoon, SK, S7N 5E5, Canada.
Research Ethics Office, Human Ethics, University of Saskatchewan, 2nd Floor, Thorvaldson Building, 110 Science Place, Saskatoon, SK, S7N 5C9, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 May 9;24(1):607. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-11066-0.
Primary health care has a central role in dementia detection, diagnosis, and management, especially in low-resource rural areas. Care navigation is a strategy to improve integration and access to care, but little is known about how navigators can collaborate with rural primary care teams to support dementia care. In Saskatchewan, Canada, the RaDAR (Rural Dementia Action Research) team partnered with rural primary health care teams to implement interprofessional memory clinics that included an Alzheimer Society First Link Coordinator (FLC) in a navigator role. Study objectives were to examine FLC and clinic team member perspectives of the impact of FLC involvement, and analysis of Alzheimer Society data comparing outcomes associated with three types of navigator-client contacts.
This study used a mixed-method design. Individual semi-structured interviews were conducted with FLC (n = 3) and clinic team members (n = 6) involved in five clinics. Data were analyzed using thematic inductive analysis. A longitudinal retrospective analysis was conducted with previously collected Alzheimer Society First Link database records. Memory clinic clients were compared to self- and direct-referred clients in the geographic area of the clinics on time to first contact, duration, and number of contacts.
Three key themes were identified in both FLC and team interviews: perceived benefits to patients and families of FLC involvement, benefits to memory clinic team members, and impact of rural location. Whereas other team members assessed the patient, only FLC focused on caregivers, providing emotional and psychological support, connection to services, and symptom management. Face-to-face contact helped FLC establish a relationship with caregivers that facilitated future contacts. Team members were relieved knowing caregiver needs were addressed and learned about dementia subtypes and available services they could recommend to non-clinic clients with dementia. Although challenges of rural location included fewer available services and travel challenges in winter, the FLC role was even more important because it may be the only support available.
FLC and team members identified perceived benefits of an embedded FLC for patients, caregivers, and themselves, many of which were linked to the FLC being in person.
初级卫生保健在痴呆症的检测、诊断和管理中起着核心作用,尤其是在资源匮乏的农村地区。护理导航是一种提高整合度和护理可及性的策略,但对于护理导航员如何与农村初级保健团队合作以支持痴呆症护理,人们知之甚少。在加拿大萨斯喀彻温省,RaDAR(农村痴呆症行动研究)团队与农村初级保健团队合作,实施了跨专业记忆诊所,其中包括阿尔茨海默病协会第一联系协调员(FLC)担任导航员。研究目的是考察 FLC 和诊所团队成员对 FLC 参与的影响的看法,并分析阿尔茨海默病协会的数据,比较与三种类型的导航员-客户联系相关的结果。
本研究采用混合方法设计。对参与五个诊所的 FLC(n=3)和诊所团队成员(n=6)进行了单独的半结构化访谈。使用主题归纳分析进行数据分析。对先前收集的阿尔茨海默病协会第一联系数据库记录进行了纵向回顾性分析。将记忆诊所的客户与诊所所在地理区域内的自我和直接推荐客户进行比较,比较首次联系的时间、持续时间和联系次数。
在 FLC 和团队访谈中都确定了三个关键主题:患者和家庭对 FLC 参与的感知益处、对记忆诊所团队成员的益处以及农村位置的影响。虽然其他团队成员评估了患者,但只有 FLC 关注照顾者,提供情感和心理支持、与服务的联系以及症状管理。面对面接触有助于 FLC 与照顾者建立关系,从而促进未来的接触。团队成员知道照顾者的需求得到了解决,并了解了痴呆症亚型和他们可以向非诊所痴呆症患者推荐的可用服务,感到如释重负。虽然农村位置的挑战包括服务较少和冬季出行困难,但 FLC 的角色更为重要,因为它可能是唯一可用的支持。
FLC 和团队成员确定了患者、照顾者和他们自己对嵌入式 FLC 的感知益处,其中许多与 FLC 亲自参与有关。