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Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol

INTRODUCTION: Most patients with Adrenal insufficiency (AI) require lifelong glucocorticoid replacement. They need to increase glucocorticoids during physical illness or major stressful situations and require parenteral hydrocortisone in the event of an adrenal crisis. Patients with AI have impaired...

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Autores principales: Llahana, Sofia, Mulligan, Kathleen, Hirani, Shashivadan P., Wilson, Stephanie, Baldeweg, Stephanie E., Grossman, Ashley, Norton, Christine, Sharman, Philippa, McBride, Pat, Newman, Stanton
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10349524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37455898
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1207715
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author Llahana, Sofia
Mulligan, Kathleen
Hirani, Shashivadan P.
Wilson, Stephanie
Baldeweg, Stephanie E.
Grossman, Ashley
Norton, Christine
Sharman, Philippa
McBride, Pat
Newman, Stanton
author_facet Llahana, Sofia
Mulligan, Kathleen
Hirani, Shashivadan P.
Wilson, Stephanie
Baldeweg, Stephanie E.
Grossman, Ashley
Norton, Christine
Sharman, Philippa
McBride, Pat
Newman, Stanton
author_sort Llahana, Sofia
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Most patients with Adrenal insufficiency (AI) require lifelong glucocorticoid replacement. They need to increase glucocorticoids during physical illness or major stressful situations and require parenteral hydrocortisone in the event of an adrenal crisis. Patients with AI have impaired quality of life and high mortality; approximately 1 in 6-12 patients are hospitalised at least once/year from a potentially preventable adrenal crisis. Adoption of self-management behaviours are crucial; these include adherence to medication, following “sick day rules” and associated behaviours that aid prevention and treatment of adrenal crisis such as symptom monitoring, having extra tablets, carrying a medical-alert ID and injection kit, and self-injecting when necessary. Current patient education is ineffective at supporting self-management behaviour change or reducing adrenal crisis-related hospitalisations. This research study aims to gain an in-depth understanding of the barriers and enablers to self-management for patients with AI and to develop an evidence-based digital self-management behaviour change intervention. METHODS: The study is conducted in accordance with the MRC Framework for developing complex interventions. Underpinned by the Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW), the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF), and the Person-Based Approach, this research will be conducted in two phases: Phase 1 will involve a sequential qualitative/quantitative mixed-methods study involving focus group interviews followed by a cross-sectional survey with patients with AI recruited from patient advocacy groups and endocrine clinics in the UK. Phase 2 will develop the Support AI, a website-based digital behaviour change intervention (DBCI) informed by Phase 1 findings to support self-management for patients with AI. The most appropriate behaviour change techniques (BCTs) will be selected utilising a nominal group technique with an Expert Panel of 10-15 key stakeholders. The design of the Support AI website will be guided by the Person-Based Approach using an Agile iterative “think-aloud” technique with 12-15 participants over 3 usability testing iterations. CONCLUSION: A theory- and evidence-based digital behaviour change intervention will be developed which will be tested in a feasibility randomised trial following completion of this study. The projected benefit includes cost-effective health care service (reduced hospitalisations and demand for specialist services) and improved health outcomes and quality of life for patients with AI.
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spelling pubmed-103495242023-07-16 Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol Llahana, Sofia Mulligan, Kathleen Hirani, Shashivadan P. Wilson, Stephanie Baldeweg, Stephanie E. Grossman, Ashley Norton, Christine Sharman, Philippa McBride, Pat Newman, Stanton Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Endocrinology INTRODUCTION: Most patients with Adrenal insufficiency (AI) require lifelong glucocorticoid replacement. They need to increase glucocorticoids during physical illness or major stressful situations and require parenteral hydrocortisone in the event of an adrenal crisis. Patients with AI have impaired quality of life and high mortality; approximately 1 in 6-12 patients are hospitalised at least once/year from a potentially preventable adrenal crisis. Adoption of self-management behaviours are crucial; these include adherence to medication, following “sick day rules” and associated behaviours that aid prevention and treatment of adrenal crisis such as symptom monitoring, having extra tablets, carrying a medical-alert ID and injection kit, and self-injecting when necessary. Current patient education is ineffective at supporting self-management behaviour change or reducing adrenal crisis-related hospitalisations. This research study aims to gain an in-depth understanding of the barriers and enablers to self-management for patients with AI and to develop an evidence-based digital self-management behaviour change intervention. METHODS: The study is conducted in accordance with the MRC Framework for developing complex interventions. Underpinned by the Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW), the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF), and the Person-Based Approach, this research will be conducted in two phases: Phase 1 will involve a sequential qualitative/quantitative mixed-methods study involving focus group interviews followed by a cross-sectional survey with patients with AI recruited from patient advocacy groups and endocrine clinics in the UK. Phase 2 will develop the Support AI, a website-based digital behaviour change intervention (DBCI) informed by Phase 1 findings to support self-management for patients with AI. The most appropriate behaviour change techniques (BCTs) will be selected utilising a nominal group technique with an Expert Panel of 10-15 key stakeholders. The design of the Support AI website will be guided by the Person-Based Approach using an Agile iterative “think-aloud” technique with 12-15 participants over 3 usability testing iterations. CONCLUSION: A theory- and evidence-based digital behaviour change intervention will be developed which will be tested in a feasibility randomised trial following completion of this study. The projected benefit includes cost-effective health care service (reduced hospitalisations and demand for specialist services) and improved health outcomes and quality of life for patients with AI. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10349524/ /pubmed/37455898 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1207715 Text en Copyright © 2023 Llahana, Mulligan, Hirani, Wilson, Baldeweg, Grossman, Norton, Sharman, McBride and Newman https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Endocrinology
Llahana, Sofia
Mulligan, Kathleen
Hirani, Shashivadan P.
Wilson, Stephanie
Baldeweg, Stephanie E.
Grossman, Ashley
Norton, Christine
Sharman, Philippa
McBride, Pat
Newman, Stanton
Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol
title Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol
title_full Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol
title_fullStr Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol
title_full_unstemmed Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol
title_short Using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the Support AI study protocol
title_sort using the behaviour change wheel and person-based approach to develop a digital self-management intervention for patients with adrenal insufficiency: the support ai study protocol
topic Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10349524/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37455898
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1207715
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