BREATHLEssness in INDIA (BREATHE-INDIA)–Study protocol for the co-design of a community breathlessness intervention in India using realist methods and intervention mapping

Background Breathlessness that persists despite treatment of causal disease(s) is disabling, associated with high therapy-related costs and poor socioeconomic outcomes. Low resource countries bear a disproportionate burden of respiratory problems, often characterised by disabling breathlessness. Low...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2023-11, Vol.18 (11), p.e0293918-e0293918
Hauptverfasser: Clark, Joseph, Salins, Naveen, Pearson, Mark, Spathis, Anna, Currow, David C, Williams, Siân, Johnson, Miriam
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
container_end_page e0293918
container_issue 11
container_start_page e0293918
container_title PloS one
container_volume 18
creator Clark, Joseph
Salins, Naveen
Pearson, Mark
Spathis, Anna
Currow, David C
Williams, Siân
Johnson, Miriam
description Background Breathlessness that persists despite treatment of causal disease(s) is disabling, associated with high therapy-related costs and poor socioeconomic outcomes. Low resource countries bear a disproportionate burden of respiratory problems, often characterised by disabling breathlessness. Low-cost self-management breathlessness-targeted interventions are effective and deliverable in community settings but have been developed in high-income countries. We aim to understand how breathlessness self-management works in 'real life' populations and cultural contexts, to develop programme theory and co-design a prototype intervention to improve persistent breathlessness management in India. Methods and analysis Using a Realist approach, Intervention Mapping and the Medical Research Council Complex Intervention Framework we will undertake two phases of work supported by our Expert Group (of respiratory, primary, palliative care physicians) and key stakeholder groups (opinion leader clinicians, community health workers and people with lived experiences of breathlessness). 1) Realist review and evaluation to identify and refine evidence and theory for breathlessness self-management, producing intervention and implementation programme theory. We will identify literature through our Expert Group, scoping searches and systematic searches (Medline, Ebscohost, CINAHL, Scopus, Psychinfo). We will map intervention components to 'what works, for whom, and where.' 2) Intervention development using Intervention Mapping to map intervention and implementation programme theory to intervention components, develop materials to support intervention delivery, and co-design a prototype educational intervention ready for early acceptability and delivery-feasibility testing and evaluation planning in India. Use of stakeholder groups is to allow people with experience of breathlessness and/or its management to contribute their views on content developed by our team based upon review of secondary data sources. Experts and Stakeholders are therefore not research subjects but are included as extended members of the study team and will not follow informed consent procedures. Experts and stakeholders will be acknowledge in outputs arising from our project if they wish to be. Our review conduct will be consistent with RAMESES quality standards. Discussion At the conclusion of our study, we will have co-designed a breathlessness intervention for use in the community setting in India read
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0293918
format Article
fullrecord <record><control><sourceid>gale_plos_</sourceid><recordid>TN_cdi_plos_journals_3069191574</recordid><sourceformat>XML</sourceformat><sourcesystem>PC</sourcesystem><galeid>A771217900</galeid><doaj_id>oai_doaj_org_article_21d1b47f977f4301b0eb3457c007d06c</doaj_id><sourcerecordid>A771217900</sourcerecordid><originalsourceid>FETCH-LOGICAL-c520t-6599f30842771876c0428e9fc2f63295d2501a29b1bcc40b07157193a5ab44c23</originalsourceid><addsrcrecordid>eNptkt9u0zAUxiMEEmPwBkhY4mZcpPhPEsdXqBuFVapAgnFtOY7dukrsYDuTesc78Bx7qT0JbhsmiiZf2D7--TvnOzpZ9hrBGSIUvd-60VvRzQZn1QxiRhiqn2RniBGcVxiSp_-cn2cvQthCWJK6qs6yu8tvi_nN9WoRglUhAGPB8svH5RxcHB8W-eH67v7X7-9xbHdg8C466TqgnQdxo4B0eauCWVvgNBDp2vejNXEHGq9E3HTqQTkqf6tsNM4e0tjWCDAGY9cgkZ0JEfQqblwbgLDtKd-LYUjgy-yZFl1Qr6b9PPvxaXFzdZ2vvn5eXs1XuSwxjHlVMqYJrAtMKappJWGBa8W0xLoimJUtLiESmDWokbKADaSopKlDohRNUUhMzrM3R92hc4FP7Q2cwIohltgiEcsj0Tqx5YM3vfA77oThh4Dzay58NLJTHKMWNQXVjFJdEIgaqBpSlFRCSFtYyaT1Yco2Nr1qZfLsRXcievpizYav3S1HsMKIsX01F5OCdz9HFSLvTZCq64RVbgwc13UyXtFyj779D33c3kStRXJgrHYpsdyL8nnqKUaUQZio2SNUWq3qjUzDqE2Kn3wojh-kdyF4pR9MIsj3o_y3GL4fZT6NMvkDRffpNA</addsrcrecordid><sourcetype>Open Website</sourcetype><iscdi>true</iscdi><recordtype>article</recordtype><pqid>3069191574</pqid></control><display><type>article</type><title>BREATHLEssness in INDIA (BREATHE-INDIA)–Study protocol for the co-design of a community breathlessness intervention in India using realist methods and intervention mapping</title><source>DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals</source><source>Public Library of Science (PLoS) Journals Open Access</source><source>EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals</source><source>PubMed Central</source><source>Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry</source><creator>Clark, Joseph ; Salins, Naveen ; Pearson, Mark ; Spathis, Anna ; Currow, David C ; Williams, Siân ; Johnson, Miriam</creator><contributor>Dey, Sanjoy Kumer</contributor><creatorcontrib>Clark, Joseph ; Salins, Naveen ; Pearson, Mark ; Spathis, Anna ; Currow, David C ; Williams, Siân ; Johnson, Miriam ; Dey, Sanjoy Kumer</creatorcontrib><description>Background Breathlessness that persists despite treatment of causal disease(s) is disabling, associated with high therapy-related costs and poor socioeconomic outcomes. Low resource countries bear a disproportionate burden of respiratory problems, often characterised by disabling breathlessness. Low-cost self-management breathlessness-targeted interventions are effective and deliverable in community settings but have been developed in high-income countries. We aim to understand how breathlessness self-management works in 'real life' populations and cultural contexts, to develop programme theory and co-design a prototype intervention to improve persistent breathlessness management in India. Methods and analysis Using a Realist approach, Intervention Mapping and the Medical Research Council Complex Intervention Framework we will undertake two phases of work supported by our Expert Group (of respiratory, primary, palliative care physicians) and key stakeholder groups (opinion leader clinicians, community health workers and people with lived experiences of breathlessness). 1) Realist review and evaluation to identify and refine evidence and theory for breathlessness self-management, producing intervention and implementation programme theory. We will identify literature through our Expert Group, scoping searches and systematic searches (Medline, Ebscohost, CINAHL, Scopus, Psychinfo). We will map intervention components to 'what works, for whom, and where.' 2) Intervention development using Intervention Mapping to map intervention and implementation programme theory to intervention components, develop materials to support intervention delivery, and co-design a prototype educational intervention ready for early acceptability and delivery-feasibility testing and evaluation planning in India. Use of stakeholder groups is to allow people with experience of breathlessness and/or its management to contribute their views on content developed by our team based upon review of secondary data sources. Experts and Stakeholders are therefore not research subjects but are included as extended members of the study team and will not follow informed consent procedures. Experts and stakeholders will be acknowledge in outputs arising from our project if they wish to be. Our review conduct will be consistent with RAMESES quality standards. Discussion At the conclusion of our study, we will have co-designed a breathlessness intervention for use in the community setting in India ready for further evaluation of: effectiveness, socioeconomic outcomes, acceptability and transferability to other low resource settings.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1932-6203</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1932-6203</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0293918</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>San Francisco: Public Library of Science</publisher><subject>Acceptability ; Analysis ; Anxiety ; Biology and Life Sciences ; Cardiovascular disease ; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ; Co-design ; Community ; Community health aides ; Education ; Engineering and Technology ; Exercise ; Family income ; High income ; Illnesses ; Informed consent ; Intervention ; Lung diseases ; Management ; Management science ; Mapping ; Medical personnel ; Medical research ; Medicine and Health Sciences ; Medicine, Experimental ; Methods ; Outdoor air quality ; Palliative treatment ; Patients ; People and Places ; Physiology ; Prototypes ; Public health ; Quality standards ; Respiratory function ; Reviews ; Searching ; Socioeconomics ; Stakeholders ; Study Protocol</subject><ispartof>PloS one, 2023-11, Vol.18 (11), p.e0293918-e0293918</ispartof><rights>COPYRIGHT 2023 Public Library of Science</rights><rights>2023 Clark et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.</rights><rights>2023 Clark et al 2023 Clark et al</rights><rights>2023 Clark et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><oa>free_for_read</oa><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><cites>FETCH-LOGICAL-c520t-6599f30842771876c0428e9fc2f63295d2501a29b1bcc40b07157193a5ab44c23</cites><orcidid>0000-0002-0527-2254 ; 0000-0001-7628-7421 ; 0000-0003-1410-0996</orcidid></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktopdf>$$Uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10621994/pdf/$$EPDF$$P50$$Gpubmedcentral$$Hfree_for_read</linktopdf><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10621994/$$EHTML$$P50$$Gpubmedcentral$$Hfree_for_read</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>230,314,727,780,784,864,885,2102,2928,23866,27924,27925,53791,53793</link.rule.ids></links><search><contributor>Dey, Sanjoy Kumer</contributor><creatorcontrib>Clark, Joseph</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Salins, Naveen</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Pearson, Mark</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Spathis, Anna</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Currow, David C</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Williams, Siân</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Johnson, Miriam</creatorcontrib><title>BREATHLEssness in INDIA (BREATHE-INDIA)–Study protocol for the co-design of a community breathlessness intervention in India using realist methods and intervention mapping</title><title>PloS one</title><description>Background Breathlessness that persists despite treatment of causal disease(s) is disabling, associated with high therapy-related costs and poor socioeconomic outcomes. Low resource countries bear a disproportionate burden of respiratory problems, often characterised by disabling breathlessness. Low-cost self-management breathlessness-targeted interventions are effective and deliverable in community settings but have been developed in high-income countries. We aim to understand how breathlessness self-management works in 'real life' populations and cultural contexts, to develop programme theory and co-design a prototype intervention to improve persistent breathlessness management in India. Methods and analysis Using a Realist approach, Intervention Mapping and the Medical Research Council Complex Intervention Framework we will undertake two phases of work supported by our Expert Group (of respiratory, primary, palliative care physicians) and key stakeholder groups (opinion leader clinicians, community health workers and people with lived experiences of breathlessness). 1) Realist review and evaluation to identify and refine evidence and theory for breathlessness self-management, producing intervention and implementation programme theory. We will identify literature through our Expert Group, scoping searches and systematic searches (Medline, Ebscohost, CINAHL, Scopus, Psychinfo). We will map intervention components to 'what works, for whom, and where.' 2) Intervention development using Intervention Mapping to map intervention and implementation programme theory to intervention components, develop materials to support intervention delivery, and co-design a prototype educational intervention ready for early acceptability and delivery-feasibility testing and evaluation planning in India. Use of stakeholder groups is to allow people with experience of breathlessness and/or its management to contribute their views on content developed by our team based upon review of secondary data sources. Experts and Stakeholders are therefore not research subjects but are included as extended members of the study team and will not follow informed consent procedures. Experts and stakeholders will be acknowledge in outputs arising from our project if they wish to be. Our review conduct will be consistent with RAMESES quality standards. Discussion At the conclusion of our study, we will have co-designed a breathlessness intervention for use in the community setting in India ready for further evaluation of: effectiveness, socioeconomic outcomes, acceptability and transferability to other low resource settings.</description><subject>Acceptability</subject><subject>Analysis</subject><subject>Anxiety</subject><subject>Biology and Life Sciences</subject><subject>Cardiovascular disease</subject><subject>Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease</subject><subject>Co-design</subject><subject>Community</subject><subject>Community health aides</subject><subject>Education</subject><subject>Engineering and Technology</subject><subject>Exercise</subject><subject>Family income</subject><subject>High income</subject><subject>Illnesses</subject><subject>Informed consent</subject><subject>Intervention</subject><subject>Lung diseases</subject><subject>Management</subject><subject>Management science</subject><subject>Mapping</subject><subject>Medical personnel</subject><subject>Medical research</subject><subject>Medicine and Health Sciences</subject><subject>Medicine, Experimental</subject><subject>Methods</subject><subject>Outdoor air quality</subject><subject>Palliative treatment</subject><subject>Patients</subject><subject>People and Places</subject><subject>Physiology</subject><subject>Prototypes</subject><subject>Public health</subject><subject>Quality standards</subject><subject>Respiratory function</subject><subject>Reviews</subject><subject>Searching</subject><subject>Socioeconomics</subject><subject>Stakeholders</subject><subject>Study Protocol</subject><issn>1932-6203</issn><issn>1932-6203</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2023</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>ABUWG</sourceid><sourceid>AFKRA</sourceid><sourceid>AZQEC</sourceid><sourceid>BENPR</sourceid><sourceid>CCPQU</sourceid><sourceid>DWQXO</sourceid><sourceid>GNUQQ</sourceid><sourceid>DOA</sourceid><recordid>eNptkt9u0zAUxiMEEmPwBkhY4mZcpPhPEsdXqBuFVapAgnFtOY7dukrsYDuTesc78Bx7qT0JbhsmiiZf2D7--TvnOzpZ9hrBGSIUvd-60VvRzQZn1QxiRhiqn2RniBGcVxiSp_-cn2cvQthCWJK6qs6yu8tvi_nN9WoRglUhAGPB8svH5RxcHB8W-eH67v7X7-9xbHdg8C466TqgnQdxo4B0eauCWVvgNBDp2vejNXEHGq9E3HTqQTkqf6tsNM4e0tjWCDAGY9cgkZ0JEfQqblwbgLDtKd-LYUjgy-yZFl1Qr6b9PPvxaXFzdZ2vvn5eXs1XuSwxjHlVMqYJrAtMKappJWGBa8W0xLoimJUtLiESmDWokbKADaSopKlDohRNUUhMzrM3R92hc4FP7Q2cwIohltgiEcsj0Tqx5YM3vfA77oThh4Dzay58NLJTHKMWNQXVjFJdEIgaqBpSlFRCSFtYyaT1Yco2Nr1qZfLsRXcievpizYav3S1HsMKIsX01F5OCdz9HFSLvTZCq64RVbgwc13UyXtFyj779D33c3kStRXJgrHYpsdyL8nnqKUaUQZio2SNUWq3qjUzDqE2Kn3wojh-kdyF4pR9MIsj3o_y3GL4fZT6NMvkDRffpNA</recordid><startdate>20231102</startdate><enddate>20231102</enddate><creator>Clark, Joseph</creator><creator>Salins, Naveen</creator><creator>Pearson, Mark</creator><creator>Spathis, Anna</creator><creator>Currow, David C</creator><creator>Williams, Siân</creator><creator>Johnson, Miriam</creator><general>Public Library of Science</general><general>Public Library of Science (PLoS)</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>3V.</scope><scope>7QG</scope><scope>7QL</scope><scope>7QO</scope><scope>7RV</scope><scope>7SN</scope><scope>7SS</scope><scope>7T5</scope><scope>7TG</scope><scope>7TM</scope><scope>7U9</scope><scope>7X2</scope><scope>7X7</scope><scope>7XB</scope><scope>88E</scope><scope>8AO</scope><scope>8C1</scope><scope>8FD</scope><scope>8FE</scope><scope>8FG</scope><scope>8FH</scope><scope>8FI</scope><scope>8FJ</scope><scope>8FK</scope><scope>ABJCF</scope><scope>ABUWG</scope><scope>AFKRA</scope><scope>ARAPS</scope><scope>ATCPS</scope><scope>AZQEC</scope><scope>BBNVY</scope><scope>BENPR</scope><scope>BGLVJ</scope><scope>BHPHI</scope><scope>C1K</scope><scope>CCPQU</scope><scope>D1I</scope><scope>DWQXO</scope><scope>FR3</scope><scope>FYUFA</scope><scope>GHDGH</scope><scope>GNUQQ</scope><scope>H94</scope><scope>HCIFZ</scope><scope>K9.</scope><scope>KB.</scope><scope>KB0</scope><scope>KL.</scope><scope>L6V</scope><scope>LK8</scope><scope>M0K</scope><scope>M0S</scope><scope>M1P</scope><scope>M7N</scope><scope>M7P</scope><scope>M7S</scope><scope>NAPCQ</scope><scope>P5Z</scope><scope>P62</scope><scope>P64</scope><scope>PATMY</scope><scope>PDBOC</scope><scope>PIMPY</scope><scope>PQEST</scope><scope>PQQKQ</scope><scope>PQUKI</scope><scope>PRINS</scope><scope>PTHSS</scope><scope>PYCSY</scope><scope>RC3</scope><scope>7X8</scope><scope>5PM</scope><scope>DOA</scope><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0527-2254</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7628-7421</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1410-0996</orcidid></search><sort><creationdate>20231102</creationdate><title>BREATHLEssness in INDIA (BREATHE-INDIA)–Study protocol for the co-design of a community breathlessness intervention in India using realist methods and intervention mapping</title><author>Clark, Joseph ; Salins, Naveen ; Pearson, Mark ; Spathis, Anna ; Currow, David C ; Williams, Siân ; Johnson, Miriam</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c520t-6599f30842771876c0428e9fc2f63295d2501a29b1bcc40b07157193a5ab44c23</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2023</creationdate><topic>Acceptability</topic><topic>Analysis</topic><topic>Anxiety</topic><topic>Biology and Life Sciences</topic><topic>Cardiovascular disease</topic><topic>Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease</topic><topic>Co-design</topic><topic>Community</topic><topic>Community health aides</topic><topic>Education</topic><topic>Engineering and Technology</topic><topic>Exercise</topic><topic>Family income</topic><topic>High income</topic><topic>Illnesses</topic><topic>Informed consent</topic><topic>Intervention</topic><topic>Lung diseases</topic><topic>Management</topic><topic>Management science</topic><topic>Mapping</topic><topic>Medical personnel</topic><topic>Medical research</topic><topic>Medicine and Health Sciences</topic><topic>Medicine, Experimental</topic><topic>Methods</topic><topic>Outdoor air quality</topic><topic>Palliative treatment</topic><topic>Patients</topic><topic>People and Places</topic><topic>Physiology</topic><topic>Prototypes</topic><topic>Public health</topic><topic>Quality standards</topic><topic>Respiratory function</topic><topic>Reviews</topic><topic>Searching</topic><topic>Socioeconomics</topic><topic>Stakeholders</topic><topic>Study Protocol</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Clark, Joseph</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Salins, Naveen</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Pearson, Mark</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Spathis, Anna</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Currow, David C</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Williams, Siân</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Johnson, Miriam</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Corporate)</collection><collection>Animal Behavior Abstracts</collection><collection>Bacteriology Abstracts (Microbiology B)</collection><collection>Biotechnology Research Abstracts</collection><collection>Nursing &amp; Allied Health Database</collection><collection>Ecology Abstracts</collection><collection>Entomology Abstracts (Full archive)</collection><collection>Immunology Abstracts</collection><collection>Meteorological &amp; Geoastrophysical Abstracts</collection><collection>Nucleic Acids Abstracts</collection><collection>Virology and AIDS Abstracts</collection><collection>Agricultural Science Collection</collection><collection>Health &amp; Medical Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>Medical Database (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Pharma Collection</collection><collection>Public Health Database</collection><collection>Technology Research Database</collection><collection>ProQuest SciTech Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Technology Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Natural Science Collection</collection><collection>Hospital Premium Collection</collection><collection>Hospital Premium Collection (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)</collection><collection>Materials Science &amp; Engineering Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central UK/Ireland</collection><collection>Advanced Technologies &amp; Aerospace Collection</collection><collection>Agricultural &amp; Environmental Science Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Essentials</collection><collection>Biological Science Collection</collection><collection>Proquest Central</collection><collection>Technology Collection</collection><collection>Natural Science Collection</collection><collection>Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management</collection><collection>ProQuest One Community College</collection><collection>ProQuest Materials Science Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Korea</collection><collection>Engineering Research Database</collection><collection>Health Research Premium Collection</collection><collection>Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni)</collection><collection>ProQuest Central Student</collection><collection>AIDS and Cancer Research Abstracts</collection><collection>SciTech Premium Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Health &amp; Medical Complete (Alumni)</collection><collection>Materials Science Database</collection><collection>Nursing &amp; Allied Health Database (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>Meteorological &amp; Geoastrophysical Abstracts - Academic</collection><collection>ProQuest Engineering Collection</collection><collection>ProQuest Biological Science Collection</collection><collection>Agricultural Science Database</collection><collection>Health &amp; Medical Collection (Alumni Edition)</collection><collection>Medical Database</collection><collection>Algology Mycology and Protozoology Abstracts (Microbiology C)</collection><collection>Biological Science Database</collection><collection>Engineering Database</collection><collection>Nursing &amp; Allied Health Premium</collection><collection>Advanced Technologies &amp; Aerospace Database</collection><collection>ProQuest Advanced Technologies &amp; Aerospace Collection</collection><collection>Biotechnology and BioEngineering Abstracts</collection><collection>Environmental Science Database</collection><collection>Materials Science Collection</collection><collection>Publicly Available Content Database</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic</collection><collection>ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition</collection><collection>ProQuest Central China</collection><collection>Engineering Collection</collection><collection>Environmental Science Collection</collection><collection>Genetics Abstracts</collection><collection>MEDLINE - Academic</collection><collection>PubMed Central (Full Participant titles)</collection><collection>DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals</collection><jtitle>PloS one</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Clark, Joseph</au><au>Salins, Naveen</au><au>Pearson, Mark</au><au>Spathis, Anna</au><au>Currow, David C</au><au>Williams, Siân</au><au>Johnson, Miriam</au><au>Dey, Sanjoy Kumer</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>BREATHLEssness in INDIA (BREATHE-INDIA)–Study protocol for the co-design of a community breathlessness intervention in India using realist methods and intervention mapping</atitle><jtitle>PloS one</jtitle><date>2023-11-02</date><risdate>2023</risdate><volume>18</volume><issue>11</issue><spage>e0293918</spage><epage>e0293918</epage><pages>e0293918-e0293918</pages><issn>1932-6203</issn><eissn>1932-6203</eissn><abstract>Background Breathlessness that persists despite treatment of causal disease(s) is disabling, associated with high therapy-related costs and poor socioeconomic outcomes. Low resource countries bear a disproportionate burden of respiratory problems, often characterised by disabling breathlessness. Low-cost self-management breathlessness-targeted interventions are effective and deliverable in community settings but have been developed in high-income countries. We aim to understand how breathlessness self-management works in 'real life' populations and cultural contexts, to develop programme theory and co-design a prototype intervention to improve persistent breathlessness management in India. Methods and analysis Using a Realist approach, Intervention Mapping and the Medical Research Council Complex Intervention Framework we will undertake two phases of work supported by our Expert Group (of respiratory, primary, palliative care physicians) and key stakeholder groups (opinion leader clinicians, community health workers and people with lived experiences of breathlessness). 1) Realist review and evaluation to identify and refine evidence and theory for breathlessness self-management, producing intervention and implementation programme theory. We will identify literature through our Expert Group, scoping searches and systematic searches (Medline, Ebscohost, CINAHL, Scopus, Psychinfo). We will map intervention components to 'what works, for whom, and where.' 2) Intervention development using Intervention Mapping to map intervention and implementation programme theory to intervention components, develop materials to support intervention delivery, and co-design a prototype educational intervention ready for early acceptability and delivery-feasibility testing and evaluation planning in India. Use of stakeholder groups is to allow people with experience of breathlessness and/or its management to contribute their views on content developed by our team based upon review of secondary data sources. Experts and Stakeholders are therefore not research subjects but are included as extended members of the study team and will not follow informed consent procedures. Experts and stakeholders will be acknowledge in outputs arising from our project if they wish to be. Our review conduct will be consistent with RAMESES quality standards. Discussion At the conclusion of our study, we will have co-designed a breathlessness intervention for use in the community setting in India ready for further evaluation of: effectiveness, socioeconomic outcomes, acceptability and transferability to other low resource settings.</abstract><cop>San Francisco</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0293918</doi><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0527-2254</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7628-7421</orcidid><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1410-0996</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
fulltext fulltext
identifier ISSN: 1932-6203
ispartof PloS one, 2023-11, Vol.18 (11), p.e0293918-e0293918
issn 1932-6203
1932-6203
language eng
recordid cdi_plos_journals_3069191574
source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Public Library of Science (PLoS) Journals Open Access; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Acceptability
Analysis
Anxiety
Biology and Life Sciences
Cardiovascular disease
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Co-design
Community
Community health aides
Education
Engineering and Technology
Exercise
Family income
High income
Illnesses
Informed consent
Intervention
Lung diseases
Management
Management science
Mapping
Medical personnel
Medical research
Medicine and Health Sciences
Medicine, Experimental
Methods
Outdoor air quality
Palliative treatment
Patients
People and Places
Physiology
Prototypes
Public health
Quality standards
Respiratory function
Reviews
Searching
Socioeconomics
Stakeholders
Study Protocol
title BREATHLEssness in INDIA (BREATHE-INDIA)–Study protocol for the co-design of a community breathlessness intervention in India using realist methods and intervention mapping
url https://sfx.bib-bvb.de/sfx_tum?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2024-12-22T11%3A49%3A09IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-gale_plos_&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=BREATHLEssness%20in%20INDIA%20(BREATHE-INDIA)%E2%80%93Study%20protocol%20for%20the%20co-design%20of%20a%20community%20breathlessness%20intervention%20in%20India%20using%20realist%20methods%20and%20intervention%20mapping&rft.jtitle=PloS%20one&rft.au=Clark,%20Joseph&rft.date=2023-11-02&rft.volume=18&rft.issue=11&rft.spage=e0293918&rft.epage=e0293918&rft.pages=e0293918-e0293918&rft.issn=1932-6203&rft.eissn=1932-6203&rft_id=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0293918&rft_dat=%3Cgale_plos_%3EA771217900%3C/gale_plos_%3E%3Curl%3E%3C/url%3E&disable_directlink=true&sfx.directlink=off&sfx.report_link=0&rft_id=info:oai/&rft_pqid=3069191574&rft_id=info:pmid/&rft_galeid=A771217900&rft_doaj_id=oai_doaj_org_article_21d1b47f977f4301b0eb3457c007d06c&rfr_iscdi=true