Cargando…
Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review
INTRODUCTION: Health and social care services worldwide need to support ageing populations to live well with advanced progressive conditions while adapting to functional decline and finitude. We aimed to identify and map common elements of effective geriatric and palliative care services and conside...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
BMJ Publishing Group
2021
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8638152/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34853100 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048417 |
_version_ | 1784608894493917184 |
---|---|
author | Bayly, Joanne Bone, Anna E Ellis-Smith, Clare Tunnard, India Yaqub, Shuja Yi, Deokhee Nkhoma, Kennedy B Cook, Amelia Combes, Sarah Bajwah, Sabrina Harding, Richard Nicholson, Caroline Normand, Charles Ahuja, Shalini Turrillas, Pamela Kizawa, Yoshiyuki Morita, Tatsuya Nishiyama, Nanako Tsuneto, Satoru Ong, Paul Higginson, Irene J Evans, Catherine J Maddocks, Matthew |
author_facet | Bayly, Joanne Bone, Anna E Ellis-Smith, Clare Tunnard, India Yaqub, Shuja Yi, Deokhee Nkhoma, Kennedy B Cook, Amelia Combes, Sarah Bajwah, Sabrina Harding, Richard Nicholson, Caroline Normand, Charles Ahuja, Shalini Turrillas, Pamela Kizawa, Yoshiyuki Morita, Tatsuya Nishiyama, Nanako Tsuneto, Satoru Ong, Paul Higginson, Irene J Evans, Catherine J Maddocks, Matthew |
author_sort | Bayly, Joanne |
collection | PubMed |
description | INTRODUCTION: Health and social care services worldwide need to support ageing populations to live well with advanced progressive conditions while adapting to functional decline and finitude. We aimed to identify and map common elements of effective geriatric and palliative care services and consider their scalability and generalisability to high, middle and low-income countries. METHODS: Tertiary systematic review (Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, CINAHL, Embase, January 2000–October 2019) of studies in geriatric or palliative care that demonstrated improved quality of life and/or health service use outcomes among older people with advanced progressive conditions. Using frameworks for health system analysis, service elements were identified. We used a staged, iterative process to develop a ‘common components’ logic model and consulted experts in geriatric or palliative care from high, middle and low-income countries on its scalability. RESULTS: 78 studies (59 geriatric and 19 palliative) spanning all WHO regions were included. Data were available from 17 739 participants. Nearly half the studies recruited patients with heart failure (n=36) and one-third recruited patients with mixed diagnoses (n=26). Common service elements (≥80% of studies) included collaborative working, ongoing assessment, active patient participation, patient/family education and patient self-management. Effective services incorporated patient engagement, patient goal-driven care and the centrality of patient needs. Stakeholders (n=20) emphasised that wider implementation of such services would require access to skilled, multidisciplinary teams with sufficient resource to meet patients’ needs. Identified barriers to scalability included the political and societal will to invest in and prioritise palliative and geriatric care for older people, alongside geographical and socioeconomic factors. CONCLUSION: Our logic model combines elements of effective services to achieve optimal quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions. The model transcends current best practice in geriatric and palliative care and applies across the care continuum, from prevention of functional decline to end-of-life care. PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER: CRD42020150252. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8638152 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | BMJ Publishing Group |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-86381522021-12-15 Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review Bayly, Joanne Bone, Anna E Ellis-Smith, Clare Tunnard, India Yaqub, Shuja Yi, Deokhee Nkhoma, Kennedy B Cook, Amelia Combes, Sarah Bajwah, Sabrina Harding, Richard Nicholson, Caroline Normand, Charles Ahuja, Shalini Turrillas, Pamela Kizawa, Yoshiyuki Morita, Tatsuya Nishiyama, Nanako Tsuneto, Satoru Ong, Paul Higginson, Irene J Evans, Catherine J Maddocks, Matthew BMJ Open Health Services Research INTRODUCTION: Health and social care services worldwide need to support ageing populations to live well with advanced progressive conditions while adapting to functional decline and finitude. We aimed to identify and map common elements of effective geriatric and palliative care services and consider their scalability and generalisability to high, middle and low-income countries. METHODS: Tertiary systematic review (Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, CINAHL, Embase, January 2000–October 2019) of studies in geriatric or palliative care that demonstrated improved quality of life and/or health service use outcomes among older people with advanced progressive conditions. Using frameworks for health system analysis, service elements were identified. We used a staged, iterative process to develop a ‘common components’ logic model and consulted experts in geriatric or palliative care from high, middle and low-income countries on its scalability. RESULTS: 78 studies (59 geriatric and 19 palliative) spanning all WHO regions were included. Data were available from 17 739 participants. Nearly half the studies recruited patients with heart failure (n=36) and one-third recruited patients with mixed diagnoses (n=26). Common service elements (≥80% of studies) included collaborative working, ongoing assessment, active patient participation, patient/family education and patient self-management. Effective services incorporated patient engagement, patient goal-driven care and the centrality of patient needs. Stakeholders (n=20) emphasised that wider implementation of such services would require access to skilled, multidisciplinary teams with sufficient resource to meet patients’ needs. Identified barriers to scalability included the political and societal will to invest in and prioritise palliative and geriatric care for older people, alongside geographical and socioeconomic factors. CONCLUSION: Our logic model combines elements of effective services to achieve optimal quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions. The model transcends current best practice in geriatric and palliative care and applies across the care continuum, from prevention of functional decline to end-of-life care. PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER: CRD42020150252. BMJ Publishing Group 2021-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8638152/ /pubmed/34853100 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048417 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. |
spellingShingle | Health Services Research Bayly, Joanne Bone, Anna E Ellis-Smith, Clare Tunnard, India Yaqub, Shuja Yi, Deokhee Nkhoma, Kennedy B Cook, Amelia Combes, Sarah Bajwah, Sabrina Harding, Richard Nicholson, Caroline Normand, Charles Ahuja, Shalini Turrillas, Pamela Kizawa, Yoshiyuki Morita, Tatsuya Nishiyama, Nanako Tsuneto, Satoru Ong, Paul Higginson, Irene J Evans, Catherine J Maddocks, Matthew Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
title | Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
title_full | Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
title_fullStr | Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
title_full_unstemmed | Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
title_short | Common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
title_sort | common elements of service delivery models that optimise quality of life and health service use among older people with advanced progressive conditions: a tertiary systematic review |
topic | Health Services Research |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8638152/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34853100 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048417 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT baylyjoanne commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT boneannae commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT ellissmithclare commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT tunnardindia commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT yaqubshuja commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT yideokhee commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT nkhomakennedyb commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT cookamelia commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT combessarah commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT bajwahsabrina commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT hardingrichard commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT nicholsoncaroline commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT normandcharles commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT ahujashalini commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT turrillaspamela commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT kizawayoshiyuki commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT moritatatsuya commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT nishiyamananako commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT tsunetosatoru commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT ongpaul commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT higginsonirenej commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT evanscatherinej commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview AT maddocksmatthew commonelementsofservicedeliverymodelsthatoptimisequalityoflifeandhealthserviceuseamongolderpeoplewithadvancedprogressiveconditionsatertiarysystematicreview |