| Literature DB >> 34968327 |
Beth Fields1, Richard Schulz2, Lauren Terhorst3, Madeline Carbery1, Juleen Rodakowski3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND/Entities:
Keywords: aging; caregiving; hospital; instrumentation; screening
Year: 2021 PMID: 34968327 PMCID: PMC8608130 DOI: 10.3390/nursrep11030049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Rep ISSN: 2039-439X
Demographic characteristics of participants.
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Care partner sex (female) | 3 (75%) |
| Expert sex (female) | 12 (63%) |
| Expert affiliation | |
| Academic | 6 (32%) |
| Academic Medical | 9 (47%) |
| Industry | 2 (11%) |
| Government | 2 (11%) |
| Location in USA | |
| Northeast | 14 (61%) |
| Southwest | 1 (4%) |
| West | 1 (4%) |
| Southeast | 3 (13%) |
| Midwest | 4 (17%) |
I-CVI scores, open-ended responses from participants, and study team revisions for CHAT.
| CHAT Item | Number of Participants in Agreement | I-CVI | Open-Ended Responses | Study Team Revisions to Open-Ended Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
|
Do you prefer to be the health care team’s contact person on behalf of the patient? | 22 | 96% | “I think if they are not the contact person, the patient, not the contact person, should identify the next person.” | We include instructions to indicate that the patient should identify any and all care partners before administering CHAT. |
|
Do you prefer to provide support to the patient during hospital care? | 14 a | 67% | “The term ‘support’ might need slight clarification or expansion. What kind of ‘support’?” | We provide examples of support, including physical, social/emotional, and health care decisions and advocacy. |
|
Do you prefer to provide support to the patient after discharge from hospital? | 19 b | 86% | See open-ended response from item 2. | See study team revision from item 2. |
|
Do you prefer to learn from health care team about patient’s condition? | 18 | 78% | “I might be confused if I were the care partner as to whom else, I would learn from if not the health care team.” | We ask care partners if they want to learn from the health care team about the patient’s condition. |
|
Do you prefer to be present when care is provided to the patient? | 16 | 70% | N/R | N/A |
|
Do you prefer to have access to the patient’s electronic medical records? | 16 | 70% | “How will issues of HIPAA and privacy and permissions be worked out for the care partner to have this level of access and to speak for patient?” | We specify that consent from the patient is needed for care partners to have access to their electronic medical records. |
|
Do you prefer to participate in decision-making about the patient’s care? | 22 | 96% | N/R | N/A |
|
Do you prefer to participate in the medical and nursing treatments for the patient? | 15 | 65% | “There are both situations in which participating in medical and nursing care would be optimal but doesn’t occur, and situations in which the care partner would prefer not to participate but doesn’t actually have a choice.” | We removed this item because item 18 captures pertinent information about medical and nursing task needs of care partner. |
|
| ||||
|
Do you need training focused on understanding the patient’s health condition(s)? | 19 b | 86% | N/R | N/A |
|
Do you need training focused on managing patient’s medication(s)? | 22 b | 100% | N/R | N/A |
|
Do you need training focused on discussing issues with the patients’ health care team? | 21 b | 95% | “Define issues. What kind of issues?” | We removed this item and modified item #7 to denote ‘discuss health care decisions about the patient’s care’. |
|
Do you need training focused on helping the patient with personal care, such as dressing, bathing, or feeding? | 21 b | 95% | “You ask about basic ADLs and IADLs. No where do you ask if they need training on assisting with mobility and transfers.” | We include ‘mobility’ as an example of personal care. |
|
Do you need training focused on fulfilling household tasks for the patient, such as shopping, managing personal finances, arranging for outside services, or providing transportation? | 16 b | 73% | “Make clear that the check boxes refer to support/training needed by the care partner.” | We list IADLs based on increasing level of complexity (shopping, transportation, arranging for medical appointments, managing personal finances). |
|
Do you need training focused on using assistive devices, such as trach, G-tube, pumps, oxygen, wheelchair, walker, or lift, with the patient? | 20 b | 91% | “Add more options or provide examples of what type of pumps we are referring to. In addition, should we also put (feeding tube) next to G-tube.” | We include ‘feeding tube’ as an example of a G-tube. |
|
Do you need training focused on preparing the patient’s home prior to discharge, such as installing grab bars, moving furniture, or purchasing adaptive equipment? | 20 b | 91% | “The questions tend to presume that a care partner is able to do at least several of these activities and even if they would like training that does not mean they ‘should’ be doing it.” | We provide broader language to represent care partners that could, as well as those that should not, prepare the patient’s home prior to discharge. |
|
Do you need training focused on locating community-based services, such as support groups and recreational activities in your local area? | 19 b | 86% | N/R | N/A |
|
Do you need training focused on discussing advance care directives with the patient, which are legal documents that allow a person to indicate their preferences for medical care should they be unable to make decisions for themselves (e.g., coma, permanently unconscious, end-of-life)? | 21 b | 95% | N/R | N/A |
|
Do you need training focused on performing medical and nursing tasks for the patient, such as wound care or giving injections? | 19 b | 86% | “My only suggestions would be to move this item up in the list so that it falls more in the category of medical care and less within the home and community care domain.” | We rearranged the order of items presented in CHAT. |
Note: N/R = no response; N/A = not applicable; a = 21 participants responded; b = 22 participants responded.