Cargando…

A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes

BACKGROUND AND AIM: In preparation for the Public Health England Impact Assessment of the 2014 AHP Public Health Strategy a follow up rapid literature review was commissioned. The aim was to identify primary studies in which Allied Health Professionals (AHP) contribute to public health outcomes, bas...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fowler Davis, S., Farndon, L., Harrop, D., Nield, L., Manson, J., Lawrence, J., Tang, S., Pownall, Sue, Elliott, Jennifer, Charlesworth, Laura, Hindle, L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9461364/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36101594
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.puhip.2020.100067
_version_ 1784786957825474560
author Fowler Davis, S.
Farndon, L.
Harrop, D.
Nield, L.
Manson, J.
Lawrence, J.
Tang, S.
Pownall, Sue
Elliott, Jennifer
Charlesworth, Laura
Hindle, L.
author_facet Fowler Davis, S.
Farndon, L.
Harrop, D.
Nield, L.
Manson, J.
Lawrence, J.
Tang, S.
Pownall, Sue
Elliott, Jennifer
Charlesworth, Laura
Hindle, L.
author_sort Fowler Davis, S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIM: In preparation for the Public Health England Impact Assessment of the 2014 AHP Public Health Strategy a follow up rapid literature review was commissioned. The aim was to identify primary studies in which Allied Health Professionals (AHP) contribute to public health outcomes, based on UK research evidence. This review was used to inform further UK policy and implementation for AHPs in the UK via Public Health England. METHODS: A rapid mixed methods review was conducted, limiting the selection of studies to those published after December 2014 and recognising the same 12 Allied Health Professions that were used in the previous review. The rapid review included all age groups and patient populations but limited the searches to studies that reflected UK AHP practices and research outcomes. The literature search included title, abstract and full-text screening with data extraction of selected papers. A nominal group method invited expert AHPs to review and select the interventions for potential impact at population level. RESULTS: 11 selected articles were grouped into two areas of interventions; health intervention/public health and secondary prevention/health improvement, based on the Public Health England Strategic Framework. AHP interventions were effective for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Osteoarthritis and specifically used to manage musculoskeletal conditions (e.g. frozen shoulder). AHPs leading vocational rehabilitation and falls management were also effective. These areas were additional to those previously identified and represented some additional specialist activity undertaken to affect health outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: This study also contributed to the UK AHP Public Health Strategic Framework 2019–2024 by appraising the UK evidence and impact of some AHP practices. Further improvement is required; for AHPs to measure the impact of their interventions which would demonstrate evidence of outcomes at population level.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9461364
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94613642022-09-12 A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes Fowler Davis, S. Farndon, L. Harrop, D. Nield, L. Manson, J. Lawrence, J. Tang, S. Pownall, Sue Elliott, Jennifer Charlesworth, Laura Hindle, L. Public Health Pract (Oxf) Review Article BACKGROUND AND AIM: In preparation for the Public Health England Impact Assessment of the 2014 AHP Public Health Strategy a follow up rapid literature review was commissioned. The aim was to identify primary studies in which Allied Health Professionals (AHP) contribute to public health outcomes, based on UK research evidence. This review was used to inform further UK policy and implementation for AHPs in the UK via Public Health England. METHODS: A rapid mixed methods review was conducted, limiting the selection of studies to those published after December 2014 and recognising the same 12 Allied Health Professions that were used in the previous review. The rapid review included all age groups and patient populations but limited the searches to studies that reflected UK AHP practices and research outcomes. The literature search included title, abstract and full-text screening with data extraction of selected papers. A nominal group method invited expert AHPs to review and select the interventions for potential impact at population level. RESULTS: 11 selected articles were grouped into two areas of interventions; health intervention/public health and secondary prevention/health improvement, based on the Public Health England Strategic Framework. AHP interventions were effective for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Osteoarthritis and specifically used to manage musculoskeletal conditions (e.g. frozen shoulder). AHPs leading vocational rehabilitation and falls management were also effective. These areas were additional to those previously identified and represented some additional specialist activity undertaken to affect health outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: This study also contributed to the UK AHP Public Health Strategic Framework 2019–2024 by appraising the UK evidence and impact of some AHP practices. Further improvement is required; for AHPs to measure the impact of their interventions which would demonstrate evidence of outcomes at population level. Elsevier 2020-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9461364/ /pubmed/36101594 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.puhip.2020.100067 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review Article
Fowler Davis, S.
Farndon, L.
Harrop, D.
Nield, L.
Manson, J.
Lawrence, J.
Tang, S.
Pownall, Sue
Elliott, Jennifer
Charlesworth, Laura
Hindle, L.
A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
title A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
title_full A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
title_fullStr A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
title_full_unstemmed A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
title_short A rapid review and expert identification of the Allied Health Professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
title_sort rapid review and expert identification of the allied health professions’ interventions as a contribution to public health outcomes
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9461364/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36101594
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.puhip.2020.100067
work_keys_str_mv AT fowlerdaviss arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT farndonl arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT harropd arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT nieldl arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT mansonj arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT lawrencej arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT tangs arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT pownallsue arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT elliottjennifer arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT charlesworthlaura arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT hindlel arapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT fowlerdaviss rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT farndonl rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT harropd rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT nieldl rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT mansonj rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT lawrencej rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT tangs rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT pownallsue rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT elliottjennifer rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT charlesworthlaura rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes
AT hindlel rapidreviewandexpertidentificationofthealliedhealthprofessionsinterventionsasacontributiontopublichealthoutcomes