Tantoco Ann-Marie, Peterson Rachel, Corbin Bethany, Coyne Francis, Herbst Brian, Hunt Susan, Levoy Emily, Luttrell Harrison, Shanske Susan, Sanyal Shuvani, Dwyer-Matzky Keely, Jenkins Ashley M
Department of Medicine (A-M Tantoco), Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Ill; Department of Pediatrics (A-M Tantoco), Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Ill.
Department of Pediatrics (R Peterson and B Herbst) University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; Department of Medicine (R Peterson and B Herbst) University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio; Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine (R Peterson and B Herbst), Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Acad Pediatr. 2025 Apr;25(3):102625. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2024.102625. Epub 2024 Dec 17.
The growing number of adults with childhood onset chronic conditions (COCC) is reflected in the increase of adult-aged admissions to pediatric institutions. Despite national bodies advising pediatric institutions to have a pediatric to adult health care transition (HCT) policy, little guidance is available on if or how to include inpatient care. We sought to create a framework-based Pediatric to Adult Transitional Care in the Hospital Context (PATCH) tool to assess how inpatient care of adults is addressed in pediatric institutional guidelines or policies (hereafter guidelines) as a first step towards informing future PATCH guideline development.
We used convenience and snowball sampling to obtain 11 pediatric institutional guidelines. Combining the GotTransition core elements with Coller et al's inpatient transition conceptual model through iterative consensus building, we developed the PATCH tool. Interrater reliability was assessed by using mean percent agreement among raters. A three-phase content validity process utilizing existing guidelines refined the finalized tool.
The PATCH tool included 42 items within nine domains. There was a high degree of agreeability among reviewers, and qualitative analysis revealed no missing items. Twenty-five (59%) of our 42 PATCH tool items were present in at least one of the reviewed guidelines, with age being present in all.
We developed the PATCH tool as a guide for pediatric institutions regarding the care of adolescent and adult patients. The PATCH tool, embedded in multidisciplinary stakeholder discussion and patient- and system-specific knowledge, may help institutions incorporate HCT into processes for adolescent and adult patients with COCCs.
患有儿童期起病的慢性病(COCC)的成年人数量不断增加,这反映在儿科机构收治的成年患者人数增多。尽管国家机构建议儿科机构制定儿科至成人医疗保健过渡(HCT)政策,但关于是否纳入或如何纳入住院护理的指导却很少。我们试图创建一个基于框架的医院环境下儿科至成人过渡护理(PATCH)工具,以评估儿科机构指南或政策(以下简称指南)中如何处理成年患者的住院护理,作为为未来PATCH指南制定提供信息的第一步。
我们采用便利抽样和滚雪球抽样获取了11份儿科机构指南。通过迭代达成共识,将GotTransition核心要素与科勒等人的住院过渡概念模型相结合,我们开发了PATCH工具。通过评估评分者之间的平均一致百分比来评估评分者间信度。利用现有指南进行的三阶段内容效度过程完善了最终工具。
PATCH工具包括九个领域的42个项目。评审者之间有高度的一致性,定性分析显示没有遗漏项目。我们的42个PATCH工具项目中有25个(59%)至少出现在一份被审查的指南中,年龄相关项目在所有指南中都有出现。
我们开发了PATCH工具,作为儿科机构护理青少年和成年患者的指南。PATCH工具融入了多学科利益相关者的讨论以及针对患者和系统的特定知识,可能有助于机构将HCT纳入患有COCC的青少年和成年患者的护理流程。