Underlying mechanisms of complex interventions addressing the care of older adults with multimorbidity: a realist review
ObjectivesTo understand how and why effective multi-chronic disease management interventions influence health outcomes in older adults 65 years of age or older.DesignA realist review.Data sourcesElectronic databases including Medline and Embase (inception to December 2017); and the grey literature.E...
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Veröffentlicht in: | BMJ open 2019-04, Vol.9 (4), p.e025009-e025009 |
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Zusammenfassung: | ObjectivesTo understand how and why effective multi-chronic disease management interventions influence health outcomes in older adults 65 years of age or older.DesignA realist review.Data sourcesElectronic databases including Medline and Embase (inception to December 2017); and the grey literature.Eligibility criteria for selecting studiesWe considered any studies (ie, experimental quasi-experimental, observational, qualitative and mixed-methods studies) as long as they provided data to explain our programme theories and effectiveness review (published elsewhere) findings. The population of interest was older adults (age ≥65 years) with two or more chronic conditions.AnalysisWe used the Realist And MEta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards (RAMESES) quality and publication criteria for our synthesis aimed at refining our programme theories such that they contained multiple context-mechanism-outcome configurations describing the ways different mechanisms fire to generate outcomes. We created a 3-step synthesis process grounded in meta-ethnography to separate units of data from articles, and to derive explanatory statements across them.Results106 articles contributed to the analysis. We refined our programme theories to explain multimorbidity management in older adults: (1) care coordination interventions with the best potential for impact are team-based strategies, disease management programmes and case management; (2) optimised disease prioritisation involves ensuring that clinician work with patients to identify what symptoms are problematic and why, and to explore options that are acceptable to both clinicians and patients and (3) optimised patient self-management is dependent on patients’ capacity for selfcare and to what extent, and establishing what patients need to enable selfcare.ConclusionsTo optimise care, both clinical management and patient self-management need to be considered from multiple perspectives (patient, provider and system). To mitigate the complexities of multimorbidity management, patients focus on reducing symptoms and preserving quality of life while providers focus on the condition that most threaten morbidity and mortality.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42014014489. |
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ISSN: | 2044-6055 2044-6055 |
DOI: | 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025009 |