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People’s preferences for self‐management support

OBJECTIVE: To identify and assess the preferences of people with long‐term health conditions toward generalizable characteristics of self‐management support interventions, with the objective to inform the design of more person‐centered support services. DATA SOURCES: Primary qualitative and quantita...

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Autores principales: Iglesias Urrutia, Cynthia P., Erdem, Seda, Birks, Yvonne F., Taylor, Stephanie J. C., Richardson, Gerry, Bower, Peter, van den Berg, Bernard, Manca, Andrea
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8763292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33634466
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13635
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author Iglesias Urrutia, Cynthia P.
Erdem, Seda
Birks, Yvonne F.
Taylor, Stephanie J. C.
Richardson, Gerry
Bower, Peter
van den Berg, Bernard
Manca, Andrea
author_facet Iglesias Urrutia, Cynthia P.
Erdem, Seda
Birks, Yvonne F.
Taylor, Stephanie J. C.
Richardson, Gerry
Bower, Peter
van den Berg, Bernard
Manca, Andrea
author_sort Iglesias Urrutia, Cynthia P.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To identify and assess the preferences of people with long‐term health conditions toward generalizable characteristics of self‐management support interventions, with the objective to inform the design of more person‐centered support services. DATA SOURCES: Primary qualitative and quantitative data collected on a representative sample of individuals with at least one of the fifteen most prevalent long‐term conditions in the UK. STUDY DESIGN: Targeted literature review followed by a series of one‐to‐one qualitative semistructured interviews and a large‐scale discrete choice experiment. DATA COLLECTION: Digital recording of one‐to‐one qualitative interviews, one‐to‐one cognitive interviews, and a series of online quantitative surveys, including two best‐worst scaling and one discrete choice experiment, with individuals with long‐term conditions. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: On average, patients preferred a self‐management support intervention that (a) discusses the options available to the patient and make her choose, (b) is individual‐based, (c) face to face (d) with doctor or nurse, (e) at the GP practice, (f) sessions shorter than 1 hour, and (g) occurring annually for two‐third of the sample and monthly for the rest. We found heterogeneity in preferences via three latent classes, with class sizes of 41% (C1), 30% (C2), and 29% (C3). The individuals’ gender [P < 0.05(C1), P < 0.01(C3)], age [P < 0.05(C1), P < 0.05(C2)], type of long‐term condition [P < 0.05(C1), P < 0.01(C3)], and presence of comorbidity [P < 0.01(C1), P < 0.01(C3), P < 0.01(C3)] were able to characterize differences between these latent classes and help understand the heterogeneity of preferences toward the above mentioned features of self‐management support interventions. These findings were then used to profile individuals into different preference groups, for each of whom the most desirable form of self‐management support, one that was more likely to be adopted by the recipient, could be designed. CONCLUSIONS: We identified several factors that could be used to inform a more nuanced self‐management support service design and provision that take into account the recipient's characteristics and preferences.
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spelling pubmed-87632922022-01-20 People’s preferences for self‐management support Iglesias Urrutia, Cynthia P. Erdem, Seda Birks, Yvonne F. Taylor, Stephanie J. C. Richardson, Gerry Bower, Peter van den Berg, Bernard Manca, Andrea Health Serv Res Research Articles OBJECTIVE: To identify and assess the preferences of people with long‐term health conditions toward generalizable characteristics of self‐management support interventions, with the objective to inform the design of more person‐centered support services. DATA SOURCES: Primary qualitative and quantitative data collected on a representative sample of individuals with at least one of the fifteen most prevalent long‐term conditions in the UK. STUDY DESIGN: Targeted literature review followed by a series of one‐to‐one qualitative semistructured interviews and a large‐scale discrete choice experiment. DATA COLLECTION: Digital recording of one‐to‐one qualitative interviews, one‐to‐one cognitive interviews, and a series of online quantitative surveys, including two best‐worst scaling and one discrete choice experiment, with individuals with long‐term conditions. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: On average, patients preferred a self‐management support intervention that (a) discusses the options available to the patient and make her choose, (b) is individual‐based, (c) face to face (d) with doctor or nurse, (e) at the GP practice, (f) sessions shorter than 1 hour, and (g) occurring annually for two‐third of the sample and monthly for the rest. We found heterogeneity in preferences via three latent classes, with class sizes of 41% (C1), 30% (C2), and 29% (C3). The individuals’ gender [P < 0.05(C1), P < 0.01(C3)], age [P < 0.05(C1), P < 0.05(C2)], type of long‐term condition [P < 0.05(C1), P < 0.01(C3)], and presence of comorbidity [P < 0.01(C1), P < 0.01(C3), P < 0.01(C3)] were able to characterize differences between these latent classes and help understand the heterogeneity of preferences toward the above mentioned features of self‐management support interventions. These findings were then used to profile individuals into different preference groups, for each of whom the most desirable form of self‐management support, one that was more likely to be adopted by the recipient, could be designed. CONCLUSIONS: We identified several factors that could be used to inform a more nuanced self‐management support service design and provision that take into account the recipient's characteristics and preferences. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-02-25 2022-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8763292/ /pubmed/33634466 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13635 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Health Services Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Health Research and Educational Trust. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Iglesias Urrutia, Cynthia P.
Erdem, Seda
Birks, Yvonne F.
Taylor, Stephanie J. C.
Richardson, Gerry
Bower, Peter
van den Berg, Bernard
Manca, Andrea
People’s preferences for self‐management support
title People’s preferences for self‐management support
title_full People’s preferences for self‐management support
title_fullStr People’s preferences for self‐management support
title_full_unstemmed People’s preferences for self‐management support
title_short People’s preferences for self‐management support
title_sort people’s preferences for self‐management support
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8763292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33634466
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.13635
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