| Literature DB >> 26002520 |
Lene Elisabeth Blekken1, Sigrid Nakrem2, Kari Hanne Gjeilo3,4, Christine Norton5, Siv Mørkved6,7, Anne Guttormsen Vinsnes8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fecal incontinence has a high prevalence in the nursing home population which cannot be explained by co-morbidity or anatomic and physiological changes of aging alone. Our hypothesis is that fecal incontinence can be prevented, cured, or ameliorated by offering care staff knowledge of best practice. However, it is not clear which educational model is most effective. To assess the effect of two educational programs for care staff, we planned a three armed cluster-randomized controlled trial. There is a lack of research reporting effects of interventions targeting improved continence care processes in older patients. Thus, to improve the quality of the planned trial, we decided to carry out a pilot study to investigate the feasibility of the planned design, the interventions (educational programs) and the outcome measures, and to enable a power calculation. This paper reports the results from the pilot study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26002520 PMCID: PMC4450463 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0263-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Description of the nursing homes
| SI | MI | Control | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient beds, long-term care | 24 | 24 | 25 |
| FTEa, RNs/ASEs, | 6 (33) | 5.6 (36) | 7.95 (43) |
| Number of RNs employed | 6 | 8 | 8 |
| Number of ASEs employed | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| FTEa, licensed practical nurses, | 7.21 (40) | 8.5 (54) | 9 (48) |
| Number of licensed practical nurses employed | 11 | 13 | 15 |
| FTEa, health-care aides, | 4.81 (26) | 1.4 (9) | 1.7 (9) |
| Number of health-care aides employed | 16 | 5 | 10 |
| Number of formalized meetings with general practitioner, per week | 1 | 1 | 1 |
SI nursing home receiving single intervention, MI nursing home receiving multifaceted intervention, RN registered nurses, ASE authorized social educators
aFull-time equivalent
Demographics of the included nursesa
|
| SI | MI |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (range) | 42 (36–48) | 38.25 (23–52) |
| Sex | All female | All female |
| Years since graduated, mean (range) | 12 (10–15) | 9.8 (1–25) |
| Employed in this nursing home Years, mean (range) | 2.4 (0,2–4) | 5 (1–9) |
SI nursing home receiving single intervention, MI nursing home receiving multifaceted intervention
aOne of the included nurses in each nursing home had the position of care manager
Fig. 1Flow chart of the inclusion and allocation of nursing homes
Selected baseline patients’ characteristics
|
| Baseline values |
|---|---|
| Age, mean years (SD) | 86 (10.14) |
| Gender, female, | 48 (77.4) |
| Sum Barthel ADL scorea, | 10.07 (5.5) |
| Cognitive impairment | |
| Yes, | 37 (59.7) |
| Partly, | 13 (21) |
aBarthels scoring form for functioning in activities of daily living, scoring range 0–20 where 0 = independent
bMissing data from one or more of the individual ADL score
Results of the knowledge testa for nurses
| Baseline, | Follow-up, | Difference, points (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SI | |||
| Mean points (range), | 14.7 (11.5–18.5) | 16 (10–21) | 1.3 (5.0) |
| MI | |||
| Mean points (range), | 17.1 (17–17.5) | 21.6 (19–26) | 4.5 (17.3) |
SI nursing home receiving single intervention, MI nursing home receiving multifaceted intervention
aScoring range 0–26 points. Twenty-six multiple choice questions: all question, except one, actuated 1 point per correct answer. One question actuated 0.5 or 1 point
Distribution of continence scores among patients with FI
| Baseline | Follow-up | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevalencea, % ( | Meana | SD | Prevalencea, % ( | Meana | SD | Mean change | |
| SI | 60 (12) | 3.83 | 0.84 | (53) 10 | 3.80 | 1.32 | −0.03 |
| MI | 50 (9) | 3.00 | 1.23 | (57) 8 | 2.63 | 0.92 | −0.37 |
| Control | 58 (14) | 3.77 | 1.37 | (67) 16 | 4.38 | 1.15 | +0.57 |
SI nursing home receiving single intervention, MI nursing home receiving multifaceted intervention
ainterRAI, H3 bowel continence (scores 2–5) 2 = seldom (have episodes, but not the last 3 days), 3 = occasionally (more seldom than daily), 4 = often (daily, have a curtain control), 5 = incontinent (no control). Patients with the scores 0 = continent, and 1 = continent with a stoma, are excluded
Results from qualitative content analysis of interviews
| Content area | Categories | Themes |
|---|---|---|
| Workshop | Professional discussions | Professional discussions as inspiration for best practice |
| Motivating | ||
| Sharing | ||
| Local opinion leader | Collaboration | Valued and empowering role, but significant allies are essential |
| Mastering | ||
| Educational outreach | Enabling | Change require guidance over time, feedback and a sense of ownership |
| Maintained focus | ||
| Monitoring | ||
| FI guideline | Organizes knowledge | The FI guideline facilitates clinical and critical thinking |
| Decision support | ||
| Comprehensive | ||
| Concrete and goal oriented | ||
| Made nurses think | ||
| Barriers | Staff discontinuity | Hard to communicate important information to all |
| Insufficient time | ||
| Large care staff | ||
| Few RNs | Isolated nurses and vague nurse identity in a fragmented care community | |
| Unclear nursing role | ||
| Sub-optimal use of skill-mix | ||
| Reluctance to use computers | Insecurity in how to find, report and utilize assessments and care plans in EPR | |
| EPR is difficult to navigate | ||
| Too few computers | ||
| Facilitators | Demonstrable results | Raised consciousness on bowel problems and concrete results motivates |
| Heightened awareness | ||
| Distinct nurse identity | Strong nurse identity in a positive care community | |
| Sense of community |
Distribution of scores after dichotomization of the primary outcome variable
| interRAIa | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Follow-up | |||
| Seldom | Often | Seldom | Often | |
| Incontinent | Incontinent | Incontinent | Incontinent | |
| SI, | 8 (40) | 12 (60) | 10 (55.6) | 8 (44.4) |
| MI, | 13 (72.2) | 5 (27.8) | 11 (78.6) | 3 (21.4) |
| Control, | 14 (58.3) | 10 (41.7) | 10 (41.7) | 14 (58.3) |
SI nursing home receiving single intervention, MI nursing home receiving multifaceted intervention
ainterRAI: 0 = continent, 1 = continent with stoma, 2 = seldom (have episodes, but not the last 3 days), 3 = occasionally (more seldom than daily), 4 = often (daily, has a curtain control), 5 = incontinent (no control); dichotomized scale: 0–2 = seldom incontinent, 3–5 = often incontinent