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Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design

PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: For the elderly to get the care and services they need, they may need to make the difficult decision about staying in their home or moving to another home. Many other people may be involved in their care too (friends, family and healthcare providers), and can support them in m...

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Autores principales: Garvelink, Mirjam M., Emond, Julie, Menear, Matthew, Brière, Nathalie, Freitas, Adriana, Boland, Laura, Perez, Maria Margarita Becerra, Blair, Louisa, Stacey, Dawn, Légaré, France
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5611600/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29062524
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-016-0040-0
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author Garvelink, Mirjam M.
Emond, Julie
Menear, Matthew
Brière, Nathalie
Freitas, Adriana
Boland, Laura
Perez, Maria Margarita Becerra
Blair, Louisa
Stacey, Dawn
Légaré, France
author_facet Garvelink, Mirjam M.
Emond, Julie
Menear, Matthew
Brière, Nathalie
Freitas, Adriana
Boland, Laura
Perez, Maria Margarita Becerra
Blair, Louisa
Stacey, Dawn
Légaré, France
author_sort Garvelink, Mirjam M.
collection PubMed
description PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: For the elderly to get the care and services they need, they may need to make the difficult decision about staying in their home or moving to another home. Many other people may be involved in their care too (friends, family and healthcare providers), and can support them in making the decision. We asked informal caregivers of elderly people to help us develop a decision guide to support them and their loved ones in making this decision. This guide will be used by health providers in home care who are trained to help people make decisions. The guide is in French and English. To design and test this decision guide we involved elderly people, their caregivers and health administrators. We first asked them what they needed for making the decision, and then designed a first version of the guide. Then we asked them to look at it and give feedback, which was used to make the final version. We then used scientific criteria to check its content and the language used. The final decision guide was acceptable to the caregivers, their elderly loved ones, and the health administrators. The guide is currently being evaluated in a large research project with home care teams in the province of Quebec. ABSTRACT: Background As they grow older, many elderly people are faced with the difficult and preference-sensitive decision about staying in their home or moving to a residence better adapted to their evolving care needs. We aimed to develop an English and French decision aid (DA) for elderly people facing this decision, and to involve end-users in all phases of the development process. Methods A three-cycle design with involvement of end-users in Quebec. End-users were elderly people (n = 4) caregivers of the elderly (n = 5), health administrators involved in home-care service delivery or policy (n = 6) and an interprofessional research team (n = 19). Cycle 1: Decisional needs assessment and development of the first prototype based on existing tools and input from end-users; overview of reviews examining the impact of location of care on elderly people’s health outcomes. Cycle 2: Usability testing with end-users, adaptation of prototype. Cycle 3: Refinement of the prototype with a linguist, graphic designer and end-users. The final prototype underwent readability testing and an International Patient Decision Aids (IPDAS) criteria compatibility assessment to verify minimal requirements for decision aids and was tested for usability by the elderly. Results Cycle 1: We used the Ottawa Personal Decision Guide to design a first prototype. As the overview of reviews did not find definitive evidence regarding optimal locations of care for elderly people, we were not able to add evidence-based advantages and disadvantages to the guide. Cycle 2: Overall, the caregivers and health administrators who evaluated the prototype (n = 10) were positive. In response to their suggestions, we deleted some elements (overview of pros, cons, and consequences of the options) that were necessary to qualify the tool as a DA and renamed it a “decision guide”. Cycle 3: We developed French and English versions of the guide, readable at a primary school level. The elderly judged the guide as acceptable. Conclusion We developed a decision guide to support elderly people and their caregivers in decision making about location of care. This paper is one of few to report on a fully collaborative approach to decision guide development that involves end-users at every stage (caregivers and health administrators early on, the frail elderly in the final stages). The guide is currently being evaluated in a cluster randomized trial. Trial registration: NCT02244359.
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spelling pubmed-56116002017-10-23 Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design Garvelink, Mirjam M. Emond, Julie Menear, Matthew Brière, Nathalie Freitas, Adriana Boland, Laura Perez, Maria Margarita Becerra Blair, Louisa Stacey, Dawn Légaré, France Res Involv Engagem Research Article PLAIN ENGLISH SUMMARY: For the elderly to get the care and services they need, they may need to make the difficult decision about staying in their home or moving to another home. Many other people may be involved in their care too (friends, family and healthcare providers), and can support them in making the decision. We asked informal caregivers of elderly people to help us develop a decision guide to support them and their loved ones in making this decision. This guide will be used by health providers in home care who are trained to help people make decisions. The guide is in French and English. To design and test this decision guide we involved elderly people, their caregivers and health administrators. We first asked them what they needed for making the decision, and then designed a first version of the guide. Then we asked them to look at it and give feedback, which was used to make the final version. We then used scientific criteria to check its content and the language used. The final decision guide was acceptable to the caregivers, their elderly loved ones, and the health administrators. The guide is currently being evaluated in a large research project with home care teams in the province of Quebec. ABSTRACT: Background As they grow older, many elderly people are faced with the difficult and preference-sensitive decision about staying in their home or moving to a residence better adapted to their evolving care needs. We aimed to develop an English and French decision aid (DA) for elderly people facing this decision, and to involve end-users in all phases of the development process. Methods A three-cycle design with involvement of end-users in Quebec. End-users were elderly people (n = 4) caregivers of the elderly (n = 5), health administrators involved in home-care service delivery or policy (n = 6) and an interprofessional research team (n = 19). Cycle 1: Decisional needs assessment and development of the first prototype based on existing tools and input from end-users; overview of reviews examining the impact of location of care on elderly people’s health outcomes. Cycle 2: Usability testing with end-users, adaptation of prototype. Cycle 3: Refinement of the prototype with a linguist, graphic designer and end-users. The final prototype underwent readability testing and an International Patient Decision Aids (IPDAS) criteria compatibility assessment to verify minimal requirements for decision aids and was tested for usability by the elderly. Results Cycle 1: We used the Ottawa Personal Decision Guide to design a first prototype. As the overview of reviews did not find definitive evidence regarding optimal locations of care for elderly people, we were not able to add evidence-based advantages and disadvantages to the guide. Cycle 2: Overall, the caregivers and health administrators who evaluated the prototype (n = 10) were positive. In response to their suggestions, we deleted some elements (overview of pros, cons, and consequences of the options) that were necessary to qualify the tool as a DA and renamed it a “decision guide”. Cycle 3: We developed French and English versions of the guide, readable at a primary school level. The elderly judged the guide as acceptable. Conclusion We developed a decision guide to support elderly people and their caregivers in decision making about location of care. This paper is one of few to report on a fully collaborative approach to decision guide development that involves end-users at every stage (caregivers and health administrators early on, the frail elderly in the final stages). The guide is currently being evaluated in a cluster randomized trial. Trial registration: NCT02244359. BioMed Central 2016-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5611600/ /pubmed/29062524 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-016-0040-0 Text en © The Author(s). 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garvelink, Mirjam M.
Emond, Julie
Menear, Matthew
Brière, Nathalie
Freitas, Adriana
Boland, Laura
Perez, Maria Margarita Becerra
Blair, Louisa
Stacey, Dawn
Légaré, France
Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
title Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
title_full Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
title_fullStr Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
title_full_unstemmed Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
title_short Development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
title_sort development of a decision guide to support the elderly in decision making about location of care: an iterative, user-centered design
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5611600/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29062524
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40900-016-0040-0
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