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Shaping innovations in long-term care for stroke survivors with multimorbidity through stakeholder engagement

Shaping innovations in long-term care for stroke survivors with multimorbidity through stakeholder engagement
Shaping innovations in long-term care for stroke survivors with multimorbidity through stakeholder engagement
Background
Stroke, like many long-term conditions, tends to be managed in isolation of its associated risk factors and multimorbidity. With increasing access to clinical and research data there is the potential to combine data from a variety of sources to inform interventions to improve healthcare. A ‘Learning Health System’ (LHS) is an innovative model of care which transforms integrated data into knowledge to improve healthcare. The objective of this study is to develop a process of engaging stakeholders in the use of clinical and research data to co-produce potential solutions, informed by a LHS, to improve long-term care for stroke survivors with multimorbidity.

Methods
We used a stakeholder engagement study design informed by co-production principles to engage stakeholders, including service users, carers, general practitioners and other health and social care professionals, service managers, commissioners of services, policy makers, third sector representatives and researchers. Over a 10 month period we used a range of methods including stakeholder group meetings, focus groups, nominal group techniques (priority setting and consensus building) and interviews. Qualitative data were recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically.

Results
37 participants took part in the study. The concept of how data might drive intervention development was difficult to convey and understand. The engagement process led to four priority areas for needs for data and information being identified by stakeholders: 1) improving continuity of care; 2) improving management of mental health consequences; 3) better access to health and social care; and 4) targeting multiple risk factors. These priorities informed preliminary design interventions. The final choice of intervention was agreed by consensus, informed by consideration of the gap in evidence and local service provision, and availability of robust data. This shaped a co-produced decision support tool to improve secondary prevention after stroke for further development.

Conclusions
Stakeholder engagement to identify data-driven solutions is feasible but requires resources. While a number of potential interventions were identified, the final choice rested not just on stakeholder priorities but also on data availability. Further work is required to evaluate the impact and implementation of data-driven interventions for long-term stroke survivors.
1932-6203
1-16
Sadler, Euan
e5891abe-c97b-4e74-b9b3-6d7c43435360
Porat, Talya
915ea1ae-68bc-4301-878d-ef3230e9d8a8
Marshall, Iain
106acd5c-af8b-4bc2-8cee-81280290abca
Hoang, Uy
45488204-2aa6-4f90-a48c-c75106e8fdaf
Curcin, Vasa
379cfb5c-dc0b-4eae-ac5a-d20b3a9474fe
Wolfe, Charles D. A.
1fbac47d-38aa-466c-8703-460021974878
Mckevitt, Christopher
4ff3bb8f-7931-4402-b68d-53aae1cd5570
Sadler, Euan
e5891abe-c97b-4e74-b9b3-6d7c43435360
Porat, Talya
915ea1ae-68bc-4301-878d-ef3230e9d8a8
Marshall, Iain
106acd5c-af8b-4bc2-8cee-81280290abca
Hoang, Uy
45488204-2aa6-4f90-a48c-c75106e8fdaf
Curcin, Vasa
379cfb5c-dc0b-4eae-ac5a-d20b3a9474fe
Wolfe, Charles D. A.
1fbac47d-38aa-466c-8703-460021974878
Mckevitt, Christopher
4ff3bb8f-7931-4402-b68d-53aae1cd5570

Sadler, Euan, Porat, Talya, Marshall, Iain, Hoang, Uy, Curcin, Vasa, Wolfe, Charles D. A. and Mckevitt, Christopher (2017) Shaping innovations in long-term care for stroke survivors with multimorbidity through stakeholder engagement. PLoS ONE, 12 (5), 1-16, [e0177102]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0177102).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Stroke, like many long-term conditions, tends to be managed in isolation of its associated risk factors and multimorbidity. With increasing access to clinical and research data there is the potential to combine data from a variety of sources to inform interventions to improve healthcare. A ‘Learning Health System’ (LHS) is an innovative model of care which transforms integrated data into knowledge to improve healthcare. The objective of this study is to develop a process of engaging stakeholders in the use of clinical and research data to co-produce potential solutions, informed by a LHS, to improve long-term care for stroke survivors with multimorbidity.

Methods
We used a stakeholder engagement study design informed by co-production principles to engage stakeholders, including service users, carers, general practitioners and other health and social care professionals, service managers, commissioners of services, policy makers, third sector representatives and researchers. Over a 10 month period we used a range of methods including stakeholder group meetings, focus groups, nominal group techniques (priority setting and consensus building) and interviews. Qualitative data were recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically.

Results
37 participants took part in the study. The concept of how data might drive intervention development was difficult to convey and understand. The engagement process led to four priority areas for needs for data and information being identified by stakeholders: 1) improving continuity of care; 2) improving management of mental health consequences; 3) better access to health and social care; and 4) targeting multiple risk factors. These priorities informed preliminary design interventions. The final choice of intervention was agreed by consensus, informed by consideration of the gap in evidence and local service provision, and availability of robust data. This shaped a co-produced decision support tool to improve secondary prevention after stroke for further development.

Conclusions
Stakeholder engagement to identify data-driven solutions is feasible but requires resources. While a number of potential interventions were identified, the final choice rested not just on stakeholder priorities but also on data availability. Further work is required to evaluate the impact and implementation of data-driven interventions for long-term stroke survivors.

Text
journal.pone.0177102 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 April 2017
Published date: 5 May 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 431353
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/431353
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 12d4ce62-6f10-4832-80ae-ef8c5d846287
ORCID for Euan Sadler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3827-224X

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Date deposited: 29 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:40

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Contributors

Author: Euan Sadler ORCID iD
Author: Talya Porat
Author: Iain Marshall
Author: Uy Hoang
Author: Vasa Curcin
Author: Charles D. A. Wolfe
Author: Christopher Mckevitt

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