| Literature DB >> 31054578 |
Sarah Jeong1, Tomiko Barrett2, Se Ok Ohr3, Peter Cleasby4, Michael David5, Sally Chan6, Helen Fairlamb7, Ryan Davey8, Peter Saul9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Advanced care planning (ACP) is a process that involves thinking about what medical care one would like should individuals be seriously ill and cannot communicate decisions about treatment for themselves. The literature indicates that ACP leads to increased satisfaction from both patients and healthcare professionals. Despite the well-known benefits of ACP, it is still underutilised in Australia.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced care planning; Chronic disease; Clinical trial; Community; Hospital; Normalisation; Nursing; Protocol
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31054578 PMCID: PMC6500579 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4118-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Agents and for mechanisms for Normalisation Process Theory
| Agents | Agents are individuals and/or groups who contribute to the processes that lead to implementation, embedding, and integration of new practice. For this study, agents are healthcare professionals (admitting Medical Officer, Registered Nurse, Social Workers and RN ACP facilitators). They use the NSW Health ‘ACP – Making your wishes known’ information to patients, to initiate, engage in discussion, and answer any questions. |
| Coherence | This involves what and how things should be done which starts with how it has been done and what we should do differently. The meaning of new practice needs to be learned, experienced and internalised by the agents. The agents in this study are provided with the opportunities to learn, experience and internalise. |
| Cognitive participation | When the process of coherence is internalised, the agents engage in a new practice across the context. The agents in this study are given 6 months to internalise and normalise ACP as a routine practice. |
| Collective action | The new practice is operated and enacted in practice. In this study, material and human resources, working relationships between agents, a degree of autonomy are closely monitored and enacted upon. |
| Reflexive monitoring | This is an evaluation of implementation process. The agents will engage in an evaluation of the implementation process that reflects cognitive participation and collective action. It involves both individual and group appraisal and reconfiguration of ACP practice to embed and sustain a new ACP practice. |
Fig. 1Research flow chart
Research sites
| Acute | Community | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | |
| LHD 1 | Geriatric Rehab Unit (LHD1 | Geriatric Rehab Unit (LHD1 | Public Community Health Centre (LHD1 | Public Community Health Centre (LHD1 |
| Medical ward at Hospital (LHD1 | Medical ward at Hospital (LHD1 | Non-public Home and Community Care (LHD1 | Non-public Home and Community Care (LHD1 | |
| LHD 2 | Medical ward at Hospital (LHD2 | Medical ward at Hospital (LHD2 | Public Community Health Centre (LHD2 | Public Community Health Centre (LHD2 |
| Medical ward at Hospital (LHD2 | Medical ward at Hospital (LHD2 | Non-public Home and Community Care Service (LHD2 | Non-public Home and Community Care Service (LHD2 | |
Note: Hospital Intervention Site (HIS), Hospital Control Site (HCS), Community Intervention Site (CIS), Community Control Site (CCS). One full-time RN for 2 wards in one hospital and one full-time RN for 2 community service providers at one setting are allocated in each LHD
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for participants in this study
| Group | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Group 1: People with Chronic Diseases | ▪ Patients aged ≥18 years old | ▪ Women who are pregnant and the human foetus. |
| Group 2: Substitute Decision Makers (SDMs) | • ≥18 years old | ▪ Children and/or young people (< 18 years old). |
| Group 3: Admitting Healthcare Professionals (MOs, RNs, &/or SW) at intervention sites (normalisation agents level one, or NA1) | ▪ ≥18 years old | ▪ Not working in one of the research units listed |
| Group 4: RNs delivering the intervention (referred to as ‘RN ACP Facilitators’) at intervention sites (normalisation agents level two, or NA2). | ▪ ≥18 years old | ▪ Not employed and trained as a NA2 for this research study |
Participant experience for all groups
| Groups | Intervention sites | Control sites | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Interview | Survey | Intervention | Interview | Survey | |
| Group 1: People with Chronic Diseases & Group 2: SDMs | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Group 3: MOs, RNs & SWs | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Group 4: RN ACP facilitators | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | N/A | N/A | N/A |
SDMs Substitute Decision Makers, MO Medical Officers, RNs Registered Nurses, SW Social Workers, Advance Care Planning: ACP