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Identifying what matters most for the health of older adults in Alberta: results from a James Lind Alliance Research Priority Setting Partnership

Identifying what matters most for the health of older adults in Alberta: results from a James Lind Alliance Research Priority Setting Partnership
Identifying what matters most for the health of older adults in Alberta: results from a James Lind Alliance Research Priority Setting Partnership

BACKGROUND: As the number of older adults continues to increase, addressing their health becomes increasingly important for both the population and the health care system. The aim of this priority setting partnership was to use direct engagement with older adults, caregivers and health care providers to identify and prioritize the most important topics on the health of older adults that should be addressed by future research. METHODS: We followed the James Lind Alliance method. We conducted an initial online and paper survey from Jan. 22 to May 2, 2018, with older adults in Alberta aged 65 years and older to identify what respondents saw as being most important for the health of older adults. We formed responses into summary questions and checked them against existing evidence. We administered a second survey (July 3 to Aug. 2, 2018) to shortlist summary questions and held an in-person workshop (Aug. 30, 2018) to rank the list through discussion and shared decision-making. RESULTS: We recruited 670 participants (32.7% older adults, 19.7% caregivers, 46.9% health and social care workers) in the initial survey to tell us what topics on the health of older adults mattered most to them. Over 3000 responses generated 101 summary questions, of which only 4 were completely answered by existing evidence. The second prioritization survey was completed by 232 participants (28.4% older adults, 24.6% care partners, 47.0% health and social care workers) to produce a shortlist of 22 high priority questions. Twenty-two attendees participated in the summary workshop to create a prioritized list of 10 questions for future research that address aspects of the health system, provision of care and living well in older adulthood. INTERPRETATION: Older adults, caregivers and clinicians collectively produced a prioritized list of questions that matter most to older adults' health in Alberta. Provincial researchers and research funders should consider these unmet knowledge needs of end-users in future endeavours.

Aged, Alberta/epidemiology, Caregivers/statistics & numerical data, Delivery of Health Care/methods, Female, Health Personnel/statistics & numerical data, Health Priorities/organization & administration, Humans, Intersectoral Collaboration, Male, Needs Assessment, Patient Participation, Research, Research Design, Social Workers/statistics & numerical data, Stakeholder Participation
2291-0026
E522-E528
Hanson, Heather M.
90ef4634-043f-4419-9d4c-cbb2d99b7e52
Cowan, Katherine
892d0e85-d5b8-4f69-8384-3ca2944d032b
Wagg, Adrian
e1fb33fb-b167-490c-87a3-9c119fcc994a
Hanson, Heather M.
90ef4634-043f-4419-9d4c-cbb2d99b7e52
Cowan, Katherine
892d0e85-d5b8-4f69-8384-3ca2944d032b
Wagg, Adrian
e1fb33fb-b167-490c-87a3-9c119fcc994a

Hanson, Heather M., Cowan, Katherine and Wagg, Adrian (2021) Identifying what matters most for the health of older adults in Alberta: results from a James Lind Alliance Research Priority Setting Partnership. CMAJ Open, 9 (2), E522-E528. (doi:10.9778/cmajo.20190225).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As the number of older adults continues to increase, addressing their health becomes increasingly important for both the population and the health care system. The aim of this priority setting partnership was to use direct engagement with older adults, caregivers and health care providers to identify and prioritize the most important topics on the health of older adults that should be addressed by future research. METHODS: We followed the James Lind Alliance method. We conducted an initial online and paper survey from Jan. 22 to May 2, 2018, with older adults in Alberta aged 65 years and older to identify what respondents saw as being most important for the health of older adults. We formed responses into summary questions and checked them against existing evidence. We administered a second survey (July 3 to Aug. 2, 2018) to shortlist summary questions and held an in-person workshop (Aug. 30, 2018) to rank the list through discussion and shared decision-making. RESULTS: We recruited 670 participants (32.7% older adults, 19.7% caregivers, 46.9% health and social care workers) in the initial survey to tell us what topics on the health of older adults mattered most to them. Over 3000 responses generated 101 summary questions, of which only 4 were completely answered by existing evidence. The second prioritization survey was completed by 232 participants (28.4% older adults, 24.6% care partners, 47.0% health and social care workers) to produce a shortlist of 22 high priority questions. Twenty-two attendees participated in the summary workshop to create a prioritized list of 10 questions for future research that address aspects of the health system, provision of care and living well in older adulthood. INTERPRETATION: Older adults, caregivers and clinicians collectively produced a prioritized list of questions that matter most to older adults' health in Alberta. Provincial researchers and research funders should consider these unmet knowledge needs of end-users in future endeavours.

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Published date: 21 May 2021
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2021 CMA Joule Inc. or its licensors. Copyright: This record is sourced from MEDLINE/PubMed, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine
Keywords: Aged, Alberta/epidemiology, Caregivers/statistics & numerical data, Delivery of Health Care/methods, Female, Health Personnel/statistics & numerical data, Health Priorities/organization & administration, Humans, Intersectoral Collaboration, Male, Needs Assessment, Patient Participation, Research, Research Design, Social Workers/statistics & numerical data, Stakeholder Participation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 453301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453301
ISSN: 2291-0026
PURE UUID: 8e163ad6-6b53-46bf-97cb-140521e0eede

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Date deposited: 12 Jan 2022 17:37
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 14:20

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Contributors

Author: Heather M. Hanson
Author: Katherine Cowan
Author: Adrian Wagg

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