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What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions

BACKGROUND: Core outcome sets (COS) prioritise outcomes based on their importance to key stakeholders, reduce reporting bias and increase comparability across studies. The first phase of a COS study is to form a ‘long-list’ of outcomes. Key stakeholders then decide on their importance. COS reporting...

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Autores principales: Harding, Andrew J. E., Morbey, Hazel, Ahmed, Faraz, Opdebeeck, Carol, Lasrado, Reena, Williamson, Paula R., Swarbrick, Caroline, Leroi, Iracema, Challis, David, Hellstrom, Ingrid, Burns, Alistair, Keady, John, Reilly, Siobhan T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6437989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30917790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-019-1103-5
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author Harding, Andrew J. E.
Morbey, Hazel
Ahmed, Faraz
Opdebeeck, Carol
Lasrado, Reena
Williamson, Paula R.
Swarbrick, Caroline
Leroi, Iracema
Challis, David
Hellstrom, Ingrid
Burns, Alistair
Keady, John
Reilly, Siobhan T.
author_facet Harding, Andrew J. E.
Morbey, Hazel
Ahmed, Faraz
Opdebeeck, Carol
Lasrado, Reena
Williamson, Paula R.
Swarbrick, Caroline
Leroi, Iracema
Challis, David
Hellstrom, Ingrid
Burns, Alistair
Keady, John
Reilly, Siobhan T.
author_sort Harding, Andrew J. E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Core outcome sets (COS) prioritise outcomes based on their importance to key stakeholders, reduce reporting bias and increase comparability across studies. The first phase of a COS study is to form a ‘long-list’ of outcomes. Key stakeholders then decide on their importance. COS reporting is described as suboptimal and this first phase is often under-reported. Our objective was to develop a ‘long-list’ of outcome items for non-pharmacological interventions for people with dementia living at home. METHODS: Three iterative phases were conducted. First, people living with dementia, care partners, health and social care professionals, policymakers and researchers (n = 55) took part in interviews or focus groups and were asked which outcomes were important. Second, existing dementia trials were identified from the ALOIS database. 248 of 1009 pharmacological studies met the inclusion criteria. Primary and secondary outcomes were extracted from a 50% random sample (n = 124) along with eight key reviews/qualitative papers and 38 policy documents. Third, extracted outcome items were translated onto an existing qualitative framework and mapped into domains. The research team removed areas of duplication and refined the ‘long-list’ in eight workshops. RESULTS: One hundred seventy outcome items were extracted from the qualitative data and literature. The 170 outcome items were consolidated to 54 in four domains (Self-Managing Dementia Symptoms, Quality of Life, Friendly Neighbourhood & Home, Independence). CONCLUSIONS: This paper presents a transparent blueprint for ‘long-list’ development. Though a useful resource in their own right, the 54 outcome items will be distilled further in a modified Delphi survey and consensus meeting to identify core outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-64379892019-04-08 What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions Harding, Andrew J. E. Morbey, Hazel Ahmed, Faraz Opdebeeck, Carol Lasrado, Reena Williamson, Paula R. Swarbrick, Caroline Leroi, Iracema Challis, David Hellstrom, Ingrid Burns, Alistair Keady, John Reilly, Siobhan T. BMC Geriatr Research Article BACKGROUND: Core outcome sets (COS) prioritise outcomes based on their importance to key stakeholders, reduce reporting bias and increase comparability across studies. The first phase of a COS study is to form a ‘long-list’ of outcomes. Key stakeholders then decide on their importance. COS reporting is described as suboptimal and this first phase is often under-reported. Our objective was to develop a ‘long-list’ of outcome items for non-pharmacological interventions for people with dementia living at home. METHODS: Three iterative phases were conducted. First, people living with dementia, care partners, health and social care professionals, policymakers and researchers (n = 55) took part in interviews or focus groups and were asked which outcomes were important. Second, existing dementia trials were identified from the ALOIS database. 248 of 1009 pharmacological studies met the inclusion criteria. Primary and secondary outcomes were extracted from a 50% random sample (n = 124) along with eight key reviews/qualitative papers and 38 policy documents. Third, extracted outcome items were translated onto an existing qualitative framework and mapped into domains. The research team removed areas of duplication and refined the ‘long-list’ in eight workshops. RESULTS: One hundred seventy outcome items were extracted from the qualitative data and literature. The 170 outcome items were consolidated to 54 in four domains (Self-Managing Dementia Symptoms, Quality of Life, Friendly Neighbourhood & Home, Independence). CONCLUSIONS: This paper presents a transparent blueprint for ‘long-list’ development. Though a useful resource in their own right, the 54 outcome items will be distilled further in a modified Delphi survey and consensus meeting to identify core outcomes. BioMed Central 2019-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6437989/ /pubmed/30917790 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-019-1103-5 Text en © The Author(s). 2019 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
Harding, Andrew J. E.
Morbey, Hazel
Ahmed, Faraz
Opdebeeck, Carol
Lasrado, Reena
Williamson, Paula R.
Swarbrick, Caroline
Leroi, Iracema
Challis, David
Hellstrom, Ingrid
Burns, Alistair
Keady, John
Reilly, Siobhan T.
What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
title What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
title_full What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
title_fullStr What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
title_full_unstemmed What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
title_short What is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
title_sort what is important to people living with dementia?: the ‘long-list’ of outcome items in the development of a core outcome set for use in the evaluation of non-pharmacological community-based health and social care interventions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6437989/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30917790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-019-1103-5
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