| Literature DB >> 30975144 |
Christine Hillestad Hestevik1, Marianne Molin2,3, Jonas Debesay2, Astrid Bergland4, Asta Bye2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Researchers have shown that hospitalisation can decrease older persons' ability to manage life at home after hospital discharge. Inadequate practices of discharge can be associated with adverse outcomes and an increased risk of readmission. This review systematically summarises qualitative findings portraying older persons' experiences adapting to daily life at home after hospital discharge.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Informal caregiver; Metasummary; Older people; Patient involvement; Qualitative research; Transition
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30975144 PMCID: PMC6460679 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4035-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Quality assessment of the included studies using the JBI-QARI appraisal instrument
| Questions | Andreasen et al | Bagge et al. | Dilworth et al. | Dossa et al. | Jones | Karlsson et al. | Knight et al. | McKeown et al | Neiterman et al. | Perry et al. | Reay et al. | Rydeman et al. | Slatyer et al. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Is there congruity between the stated philosophical perspective and the research methodology? | U | U | NA | U | Y | Y | U | Y | U | Y | Y | NA | Y |
| Is there congruity between the research methodology and the research question or objectives? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Is there congruity between the research methodology and the methods used to collect data? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Is there congruity between the research methodology and the representation and analysis of data? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Is there congruity between the research methodology and the interpretation of results? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Is there a statement that locates the researcher culturally or theoretically? | N | N | U | N | Y | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | N | N |
| Is the influence of the researcher on the research, and vice versa, addressed? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | N | U | Y | Y |
| Are participants, and their voices, adequately represented? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Is the research ethical according to current criteria or, for recent studies, is there evidence of ethical approval by an appropriate body? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Do the conclusions drawn in the research report flow from the analysis, or interpretation, of the data? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Y yes, N no, U unclear and NA not applicable
Fig. 1Identification and selection of studies. Source: Moher, Liberati, Tetzlaff, Altman, and The PRISMA Group. (2009). Note. For more information, visit www.prisma-statement.org
Characteristics of the qualitative studies selected for analysis
| Author, year, country | Country | Data collection/methodology | Sample | Setting | Cause of admission (n) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andreasen, J, et al. (2015) | Denmark | Semi-structured interviews/interpretive description | 7 Women | At home approx. 1 week after discharge from hospital | 4 Pneumonia |
| Bagge et al. (2014) | New Zealand | Semi-structured interviews/thematic analysis | 21 Women | At home 1–2 weeks after discharge from hospital | Not reported |
| Dilworth et al. | Australia | Semi-structured interview/thematic analysis | 1 Woman | In hospital after being readmitted to hospital following recent discharge (within 28 days) to their homes | 1 Renal failure/Fall |
| Dossa et al. (2012) | United States | Semi-structured interviews/thematic coding technique informed by grounded theory methodology | 18 Men | At home 2 weeks, 1 month and 2 months after discharge from hospital | The discharge diagnoses included total hip or total knee replacements, laminectomy, diabetes, arthritis, coronary artery disease, hypertension and alcohol abuse |
| Jones, GB (2012) | United States | Semi-structured interviews/phenomenological hermeneutical | 16 Women | At follow-up visit in two cardiology/cardiovascular clinics within 4 weeks of discharge from hospital | The majority of participants had a cardiovascular medical diagnosis ( |
| Karlsson et al. (2016) | Sweden | Qualitative interview/content analysis | 7 Women | At home within 2 months after discharge from hospital | 7 Surgery of aortic aneurysm |
| Knight et al. (2011) | United Kingdom | Semi-structured interviews/thematic analysis | 4 Women | At home 6 weeks to 3 months after discharge from hospital | Not reported |
| McKeown et al. (2007) | Ireland | Qualitative interviews/ | 5 Women | At home 2 weeks after discharge from hospital | Not reported |
| Neitherman et al. (2015) | Canada | Semi-structured interviews/thematic analysis | 7 Women | At home 2–5 weeks after discharge | The most common diagnoses for hospitalisation were cardiovascular conditions (congestive heart failure, stroke) and respiratory problems (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pneumonia). Other patients had a variety of health problems, including diabetes, kidney disease, gastro-intestinal and neurological problems and cancer |
| Perry et al. (2011) | New Zealand | Semi-structured interviews/interpretative phenomenological analysis | 8 Women | At home approx. 6 weeks after discharge from hospital | Orthopaedic lower limb surgery |
| Reay et al. (2015) | Australia | Semi-structured interviews | 6 Women | At home approx. 3 weeks after discharge | Total hip replacement surgery |
| Rydeman et al. (2008) | Sweden | Semi-structured interviews/grounded theory | 7 Women | At home 4–8 weeks after discharge from hospital | 4 Infection |
| Slatyer et al. (2013) | Australia | Semi-structured interviews/thematic content analysis | 6 Women | At home within 28 days of discharge (after readmission to hospital) | Breathing, gastric, renal or cardiovascular problems; falls; or chest pain7 |
Findings, including main themes and thematic statements, with calculated frequency effect % (rounded to nearest whole number)
| Findings | Included studies | Frequency effect % |
|---|---|---|
| Theme 1: Experiencing an Insecure and Unsafe Transition | ||
| Lack of information about health situation, treatment and/or care | [ | 69% |
| Experience of rushed discharge | [ | 62% |
| Confusion about medication | [ | 62% |
| Lack of involvement in own treatment and care | [ | 54% |
| Not being involved in decisions about own life | [ | 54% |
| Not understanding information | [ | 46% |
| Several providers coordinating care led to discontinuity of care | [ | 46% |
| Errors in treatment | [ | 46% |
| Discharge information not explained well | [ | 38% |
| Lack of information about when to go home | [ | 38% |
| Lack of communication between the different service providers | [ | 38% |
| Conflicting opinions between healthcare providers | [ | 31% |
| Lack of medical reconciliation | [ | 23% |
| Experience of well-prepared and timely discharge | [ | 23% |
| Theme 2: Settling into a New Situation at Home | ||
| Dependent on additional help from others | [ | 100% |
| Losing independence | [ | 77% |
| Finding the transition back home a challenge | [ | 62% |
| Home not being prepared | [ | 54% |
| Problems performing daily activities | [ | 54% |
| Not receiving care according to needs | [ | 54% |
| Wanting to maintain and regain independence | [ | 46% |
| Not feeling ready to go home | [ | 38% |
| Feeling confident to go home | [ | 38% |
| Not being able to participate in meaningful activities | [ | 38% |
| Feeling lonely and isolated | [ | 38% |
| Lack of specialised equipment | [ | 38% |
| Changing healthcare personnel disturbed effort to get back to daily routines | [ | 15% |
| Feeling depressed | [ | 15% |
| Experiencing no meaning in life | [ | 15% |
| Wanting to die | [ | 15% |
| Theme 3: What Would I do Without My Informal Caregiver? | ||
| Dependent on informal caregivers for medication and healthcare | [ | 62% |
| Dependent on family and friends to manage daily activities at home | [ | 62% |
| Being aware of the effort put in by informal caregivers | [ | 38% |
| Importance of strong, positive relationships with family and friends | [ | 38% |
| Dependent on informal caregivers to understand information | [ | 31% |
| Illness putting a strain on relationship with family and friends | [ | 23% |
| Feeling like a burden | [ | 23% |
| Theme 4: Experience of a Paternalistic Model | ||
| Healthcare personnel perceived as distant and stressed | [ | 62% |
| Not being seen or heard | [ | 46% |
| Reluctant to ask | [ | 38% |
| Healthcare personnel perceived as authoritarian | [ | 31% |
| Doctor knows best | [ | 31% |