Meinert Edward, Milne-Ives Madison, Sawyer Jennifer, Boardman Liz, Mitchell Sarah, Mclean Brendan, Richardson Mark, Shankar Rohit
Translational and Clinical Research Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; and Department of Primary Care and Public Health, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Translational and Clinical Research Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; and Centre for Health Technology, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Plymouth, Plymouth, UK.
BJPsych Open. 2024 Dec 13;11(1):e3. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2024.825.
Nearly 25% of people with intellectual disability (PwID) have epilepsy compared to 1% of the UK general population. PwID are commonly excluded from research, eventually affecting their care. Understanding seizures in PwID is particularly challenging because of reliance on subjective external observation and poor objective validation. Remote electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring could capture objective data, but particular challenges and implementation strategies for this population need to be understood.
This co-production aimed to explore the accessibility and potential impact of a remote, long-term EEG tool (UnEEG 24/7 SubQ) for PwID and epilepsy.
We conducted six, 2-hour long workshops; three with people with mild intellectual disability and three with families/carers of people with moderate-profound intellectual disability. Brief presentations, easy read information and model demonstrations were used to explain the problem and device. A semi-structured guide developed by a communication specialist and art-based techniques facilitated discussion with PwID. For family/carers, active listening was employed. All conversations were recorded and transcribed. Artificial intelligence-based coding and thematic analysis (ATLAS.ti and ChatGPT) were synthesised with manual theming to generate insights.
Co-production included four PwID, five family members and seven care professionals. Three main themes were identified: (1) perceived benefits for improving seizure understanding, informing care and reducing family and carer responsibility to accurately identify seizures; (2) the device was feasible for some PwID but not all; and (3) appropriate person-centred communication is essential for all stakeholders to reduce concerns.
The workshops identified key benefits and implementing barriers to SubQ in PwID.
与英国1%的普通人群相比,近25%的智力残疾者患有癫痫。智力残疾者通常被排除在研究之外,最终影响到他们的护理。由于依赖主观的外部观察且客观验证不足,了解智力残疾者的癫痫发作尤其具有挑战性。远程脑电图(EEG)监测可以获取客观数据,但需要了解该人群面临的特殊挑战和实施策略。
这项合作旨在探索一种远程长期EEG工具(UnEEG 24/7 SubQ)对智力残疾者和癫痫患者的可及性及潜在影响。
我们举办了六场时长为两小时的研讨会;三场面向轻度智力残疾者,三场面向中度至重度智力残疾者的家庭/护理人员。通过简短的演示、易读的信息和模型展示来解释问题和设备。由沟通专家制定的半结构化指南和基于艺术的技巧促进了与智力残疾者的讨论。对于家庭/护理人员,则采用积极倾听的方式。所有对话均进行了录音和转录。基于人工智能的编码和主题分析(ATLAS.ti和ChatGPT)与人工主题分析相结合,以生成见解。
合作参与人员包括四名智力残疾者、五名家庭成员和七名护理专业人员。确定了三个主要主题:(1)认为有助于提高对癫痫发作的理解、为护理提供信息并减轻家庭和护理人员准确识别癫痫发作的责任;(2)该设备对一些智力残疾者可行,但并非对所有人都可行;(3)适当的以人为本的沟通对所有利益相关者减少担忧至关重要。
研讨会确定了SubQ在智力残疾者中的主要益处和实施障碍。