| Literature DB >> 29273048 |
Margaret Maxwell1, Karen Semple1, Sarah Wane2, Andrew Elders3, Edward Duncan1, Purva Abhyankar1, Joyce Wilkinson1, Douglas Tincello4, Eileen Calveley1, Mary MacFarlane1, Doreen McClurg3, Karen Guerrero5, Helen Mason3, Suzanne Hagen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pelvic Organ Prolapse (POP) is estimated to affect 41%-50% of women aged over 40. Findings from the multi-centre randomised controlled "Pelvic Organ Prolapse PhysiotherapY" (POPPY) trial showed that individualised pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) was effective in reducing symptoms of prolapse, improved quality of life and showed clear potential to be cost-effective. However, provision of PFMT for prolapse continues to vary across the UK, with limited numbers of women's health physiotherapists specialising in its delivery. Implementation of this robust evidence from the POPPY trial will require attention to different models of delivery (e.g. staff skill mix) to fit with differing care environments.Entities:
Keywords: Implementation; Pelvic floor muscle training; Pelvic organ prolapse
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29273048 PMCID: PMC5741940 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2795-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Realist Evaluation Study site descriptions
| Site | Urban/rural | POPPY experience | Current dominant model |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Urban | POPPY recruiting centre | Primary and secondary care provision of specialist physiotherapy referred by primary care and acute services with a mix of 1:1 and group provision available. Women not routinely sent to physiotherapy as first line treatment. Several POPPY physiotherapists providing current input to women with POP |
| 2 | Urban | Large involvement in medically driven trials but no focus on physiotherapy based trials | Currently has some specialist physiotherapy involvement but greater specialist nurse-led service for women |
| No POPPY involvement | |||
| 3 | Rural | No POPPY involvement and limited other trial involvement | Current interest in re-design and expanding to junior grade physiotherapists and other nursing staff (as practitioners with special interest) |
POP Pelvic Organ Prolapse, POPPY Pelvic Organ Prolapse PhysiotherapY trial
Outcomes Study site descriptions
| Site | Urban/rural | POPPY experience | Current dominant model |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Urban | POPPY recruiting centre | Primary and secondary care provision of specialist physiotherapy referred by primary care and acute services with a mix of 1:1 and group provision available. Women not routinely sent to physiotherapy as first line treatment. Several POPPY physiotherapists providing current input to women with POP |
| 2 | Urban | Large involvement in medically driven trials but no focus on physiotherapy based trials | Currently has some specialist physiotherapy involvement but greater specialist nurse-led service for women |
| No POPPY involvement | |||
| 3 | Rural | No POPPY involvement and limited other trial involvement | Current interest in re-design and expanding to junior grade physiotherapists and other nursing staff (as practitioners with special interest) |
| 4 | Urban | No POPPY involvement | Currently has some specialist physiotherapy involvement, looking to increase capacity for PFMT provision with other staff groups |
| 5 | Urban | No POPPY involvement | Currently has some specialist physiotherapy involvement, looking to increase capacity for PFMT provision with other staff groups |
PFMT Pelvic Floor Muscle Training, POP Pelvic Organ Prolapse, POPPY Pelvic Organ Prolapse PhysiotherapY trial
Fig. 1PROPEL Realist Evaluation and outcomes study flowchart EQ-5D-5 L: EuroQol 5 dimensions questionnaire; ICIQ-UI SF: International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire Urinary Incontinence short form; n: number of participants; PFMT: Pelvic floor muscle training; POP: Pelvic organ prolapse
PROPEL Realist Evaluation data collection process
| Data collection method | Participants (per site) | Round 1 - Discussion and development of the models | Round 2 - Operationalising the models for successful implementation | Round 3 - Delivering the models | Round 4 - Review of the models |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focus groups with women | 8–10 women living with prolapse who have been through the current service, identified by specialist PTs in the area | To understand initial perceptions of the acceptability of PFMT, preferences for service delivery models, what the service might look like (referrals, location etc.) | |||
| Service planning meeting | Local service managers, clinical leads, consultants and other relevant staff groups identified by the study specialist PTs at each location and invited to attend | (1 meeting/site) Discuss current service provision, local capacity issues and how these might be addressed with the available or an extended staff pool | (1 or 2 meetings/site) Observe the decision making process, firming planning decisions around what to implement and how the service will be operationalised within the current service structure | ||
| Interviews with managers/service leads | 2 interviewees selected from key decision makers, likely those attending the SPM | To explore any anticipated barriers or facilitators and explore further contextual detail that may influence choice of service model and implementation | To explore operationalisation of the decision and how this will be translated to staff involved in the project | To understand how referrals are made and cascaded to trained staff, any anxieties voiced about training/support, local resources | To explore the perceptions of the success of the model and sustainability, possible modifications, impact of the study, future plans |
| Interviews with consultants/senior AHPs/senior nurses/GPs | 2 interviewees selected from key decision makers, likely those attending SPM | To explore their perceptions of PFMT delivery and the proposed models and any barriers of facilitators they anticipate | To explore how they see their involvement in the service change | To discuss any problems they have observed during implementation and any impact they perceive the PFMT services are having | To explore the perceptions of the implementation, its impact and future (should it be sustained/expanded) |
| Interviews with staff delivering PFMT | 6 staff who are delivering PFMT within the new service | To explore what they think of the decision to have them deliver PFMT, their expectations of training and delivery and any anticipated impact on staff | To discuss how they feel the implementation is going, any concern or problems in delivery/referrals, their perceived early impact of delivering PFMT | To discuss the overall experiences of delivering PFMT, perceived impact of their role, anything done difference, key drivers to success | |
| Interviews with a sample of women | 8 women who have been recruited as patients into the new service, representing women seen by a range of staff mixes utilised locally | To discuss their experiences of POP, expectations of treatment and any perceived issues for compliance | To explore their experience of the intervention, adherence to appointments and therapy, and outcomes |
PFMT Pelvic floor muscle training, POP Pelvic organ prolapse, PTs Physiotherapists, SPM Service planning meeting