How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model

Abstract Background Current models of patient‐enacted involvement do not capture the nuanced dynamic and interactional nature of involvement in care. This is important for the development of flexible interventions that can support patients to ‘reach‐in’ to complex health‐care systems. Objective To d...

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Main Authors: Jenni Murray, Natasha Hardicre, Yvonne Birks, Jane O’Hara, Rebecca Lawton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-10-01
Series:Health Expectations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12930
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spelling doaj-a5aa7dd4ad9d4f04ba60548fb4ae83a62020-11-25T01:28:39ZengWileyHealth Expectations1369-65131369-76252019-10-0122588389310.1111/hex.12930How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and modelJenni Murray0Natasha Hardicre1Yvonne Birks2Jane O’Hara3Rebecca Lawton4Yorkshire Quality and Safety Research Group, Bradford Institute for Health Research, Temple Bank House Bradford Royal Infirmary Bradford UKYorkshire Quality and Safety Research Group, Bradford Institute for Health Research, Temple Bank House Bradford Royal Infirmary Bradford UKSocial Policy Research Unit University of York York UKYorkshire Quality and Safety Research Group, Bradford Institute for Health Research, Temple Bank House Bradford Royal Infirmary Bradford UKYorkshire Quality and Safety Research Group, Bradford Institute for Health Research, Temple Bank House Bradford Royal Infirmary Bradford UKAbstract Background Current models of patient‐enacted involvement do not capture the nuanced dynamic and interactional nature of involvement in care. This is important for the development of flexible interventions that can support patients to ‘reach‐in’ to complex health‐care systems. Objective To develop a dynamic and interactional model of patient‐enacted involvement in care. Search strategy Electronic search strategy run in five databases and adapted to run in an Internet search engine supplemented with searching of reference lists and forward citations. Inclusion criteria Qualitative empirical published reports of older people's experiences of care transitions from hospital to home. Data extraction and synthesis Reported findings meeting our definition of involvement in care initially coded into an existing framework. Progression from deductive to inductive coding leads to the development of a new framework and thereafter a model representing changing states of involvement. Main results Patients and caregivers occupy and move through multiple states of involvement in response to perceived interactions with health‐care professionals as they attempt to resolve health‐ and well‐being‐related goals. ‘Non‐involvement’, ‘information‐acting’, ‘challenging and chasing’ and ‘autonomous‐acting’ were the main states of involvement. Feeling uninvolved as a consequence of perceived exclusion leads patients to act autonomously, creating the potential to cause harm. Discussion and conclusion The model suggests that involvement is highly challenging for older people during care transitions. Going forward, interventions which seek to support patient involvement should attempt to address the dynamic states of involvement and their mediating factors.https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12930involvementmodelolder peopletransitions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jenni Murray
Natasha Hardicre
Yvonne Birks
Jane O’Hara
Rebecca Lawton
spellingShingle Jenni Murray
Natasha Hardicre
Yvonne Birks
Jane O’Hara
Rebecca Lawton
How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model
Health Expectations
involvement
model
older people
transitions
author_facet Jenni Murray
Natasha Hardicre
Yvonne Birks
Jane O’Hara
Rebecca Lawton
author_sort Jenni Murray
title How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model
title_short How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model
title_full How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model
title_fullStr How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model
title_full_unstemmed How older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: A systematic review and model
title_sort how older people enact care involvement during transition from hospital to home: a systematic review and model
publisher Wiley
series Health Expectations
issn 1369-6513
1369-7625
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Current models of patient‐enacted involvement do not capture the nuanced dynamic and interactional nature of involvement in care. This is important for the development of flexible interventions that can support patients to ‘reach‐in’ to complex health‐care systems. Objective To develop a dynamic and interactional model of patient‐enacted involvement in care. Search strategy Electronic search strategy run in five databases and adapted to run in an Internet search engine supplemented with searching of reference lists and forward citations. Inclusion criteria Qualitative empirical published reports of older people's experiences of care transitions from hospital to home. Data extraction and synthesis Reported findings meeting our definition of involvement in care initially coded into an existing framework. Progression from deductive to inductive coding leads to the development of a new framework and thereafter a model representing changing states of involvement. Main results Patients and caregivers occupy and move through multiple states of involvement in response to perceived interactions with health‐care professionals as they attempt to resolve health‐ and well‐being‐related goals. ‘Non‐involvement’, ‘information‐acting’, ‘challenging and chasing’ and ‘autonomous‐acting’ were the main states of involvement. Feeling uninvolved as a consequence of perceived exclusion leads patients to act autonomously, creating the potential to cause harm. Discussion and conclusion The model suggests that involvement is highly challenging for older people during care transitions. Going forward, interventions which seek to support patient involvement should attempt to address the dynamic states of involvement and their mediating factors.
topic involvement
model
older people
transitions
url https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12930
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