Literature DB >> 21125070

The feasibility of assessing the Flinders Program™ of patient self-management in New Zealand primary care settings.

Margaret P Horsburgh1, Janine J Bycroft, Faith M Mahony, Dianne E Roy, Denise J Miller, Felicity A Goodyear-Smith, Erin Cj Donnell.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The Flinders Program™ has been adopted in New Zealand as a useful and appropriate approach for self-management with primary care clients who have chronic conditions. The Flinders Program™ has not been evaluated in New Zealand settings. AIM: To assess the feasibility of undertaking a substantive long-term trial to gauge the effectiveness of primary care nurses using the Flinders Program™ to improve health outcomes for New Zealand populations.
METHODS: A pilot study was undertaken considering four components of feasibility of conducting a long-term trial: practice recruitment, participant recruitment, delivery of the intervention and outcome measures. This included comparing 27 intervention and 30 control patients with long-term health conditions with respect to change in self-management capacity-Partners in Health (PIH) scale-quality of care using the Patient Assessment of Chronic Illness Care (PACIC) scale and self-efficacy across six months. Intervention participants received care planning with practice nurses using the Flinders Program™ in general practices, while control participants received usual care in comparable practices.
RESULTS: General practice and participant recruitment was challenging, together with a lack of organisational capacity and resources in general practice for the Flinders Program™. The measures of self-management capacity (PIH), quality of care (PACIC) and self-efficacy were useful and valuable primary outcome measures. DISCUSSION: The overall findings do not support a substantive trial of the Flinders Program™ in primary care. Difficulties associated with participant recruitment and ability of practice nurses to undertake the Flinders Program™ within general practice need to be resolved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21125070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Prim Health Care        ISSN: 1172-6156


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