The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Understanding support systems for Parkinson's disease management in community settings: a cross‐national qualitative study

Understanding support systems for Parkinson's disease management in community settings: a cross‐national qualitative study
Understanding support systems for Parkinson's disease management in community settings: a cross‐national qualitative study
Background: health and social care systems face difficulties in managing multimorbidity, disease burden and complex needs in long-term conditions such as Parkinson's disease.

Objective: this study aimed to develop a European understanding of how health and social care professionals can collaborate with stakeholders from different organizations and sectors to enhance the management of Parkinson's disease in a community setting by identifying the existing gaps in this process and how people with Parkinson's disease and their family carers could benefit from these partnerships.

Methods: a mixed-methods sequential study was conducted in Denmark, Norway, Spain and the United Kingdom. The findings from the qualitative phase are presented. Individual semistructured interviews were analysed using Braun's and Clarke's thematic analysis. A meta-ethnography approach was used to analyse and synthesize cross-national findings.

Results: a total of 41 healthcare professionals and 39 stakeholders from different disciplines and sectors were interviewed in the four countries. The participants acknowledged a lack of awareness of available resources and poor communication between the different support systems in the management of Parkinson's disease. To promote multiagency collaborations, the participants highlighted the need to organize services along the Parkinson's disease journey, patient involvement and strategic involvement of carers in organizing resources and Parkinson's disease care pathways. According to the participants, the benefits from multiagency partnerships could lead to an enhanced continuity of care and specialized knowledge, mobilization of resources in the community, personalized support and improved access to services.

Conclusions: policymakers are called upon to create formal structures that facilitate multisectoral collaborations to promote an integrated system of care for the management of Parkinson's disease in the community. To address this challenge, we propose five strategies showing how organizations can work together to optimize the use of resources and enhance the management of Parkinson's disease throughout the illness trajectory.

Patient or Public Contribution
Patient and Public Involvement groups made up of stakeholders, healthcare professionals, patients with Parkinson's disease and family carers participated in the design of the study, the development of the interview guides and the validation of the findings.
1369-6513
Soilemezi, Dia
74f20da9-6646-419a-bec3-d34348bfaa3c
Palmar‐Santos, Ana
0b01d1c5-5f30-4273-a8b1-0fe5f45e7723
Navarta‐Sánchez, M. Victoria
5d227f61-ce12-4718-978d-fcdfebc02013
Roberts, Helen C.
fb8b8c5d-45e1-4ea6-b5c7-c99a08cf0e4b
Pedraz‐marcos, Azucena
d6b7f3ad-d063-4c17-ac60-d84b19cfac0a
Haahr, Anita
a10458a2-592d-4afa-adc6-ee562cb9929e
Sørensen, Dorthe
5713f907-ffb7-4e13-8416-a8c0c6ca2d73
Bragstad, Line K.
eb5f184e-f4d8-45c2-8e42-c614fd658f75
Hjelle, Ellen G.
c6a9d41c-70ad-4f97-8b42-ad4e4093d9fd
Haavaag, Silje Bjørnsen
cc0f4de2-0f03-40aa-b881-48a95e33751c
Portillo, Mari Carmen
f913b5c5-b949-48f2-b1d0-eb7505484d5c
Soilemezi, Dia
74f20da9-6646-419a-bec3-d34348bfaa3c
Palmar‐Santos, Ana
0b01d1c5-5f30-4273-a8b1-0fe5f45e7723
Navarta‐Sánchez, M. Victoria
5d227f61-ce12-4718-978d-fcdfebc02013
Roberts, Helen C.
fb8b8c5d-45e1-4ea6-b5c7-c99a08cf0e4b
Pedraz‐marcos, Azucena
d6b7f3ad-d063-4c17-ac60-d84b19cfac0a
Haahr, Anita
a10458a2-592d-4afa-adc6-ee562cb9929e
Sørensen, Dorthe
5713f907-ffb7-4e13-8416-a8c0c6ca2d73
Bragstad, Line K.
eb5f184e-f4d8-45c2-8e42-c614fd658f75
Hjelle, Ellen G.
c6a9d41c-70ad-4f97-8b42-ad4e4093d9fd
Haavaag, Silje Bjørnsen
cc0f4de2-0f03-40aa-b881-48a95e33751c
Portillo, Mari Carmen
f913b5c5-b949-48f2-b1d0-eb7505484d5c

Soilemezi, Dia, Palmar‐Santos, Ana, Navarta‐Sánchez, M. Victoria, Roberts, Helen C., Pedraz‐marcos, Azucena, Haahr, Anita, Sørensen, Dorthe, Bragstad, Line K., Hjelle, Ellen G., Haavaag, Silje Bjørnsen and Portillo, Mari Carmen (2022) Understanding support systems for Parkinson's disease management in community settings: a cross‐national qualitative study. Health Expectations. (doi:10.1111/hex.13691).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: health and social care systems face difficulties in managing multimorbidity, disease burden and complex needs in long-term conditions such as Parkinson's disease.

Objective: this study aimed to develop a European understanding of how health and social care professionals can collaborate with stakeholders from different organizations and sectors to enhance the management of Parkinson's disease in a community setting by identifying the existing gaps in this process and how people with Parkinson's disease and their family carers could benefit from these partnerships.

Methods: a mixed-methods sequential study was conducted in Denmark, Norway, Spain and the United Kingdom. The findings from the qualitative phase are presented. Individual semistructured interviews were analysed using Braun's and Clarke's thematic analysis. A meta-ethnography approach was used to analyse and synthesize cross-national findings.

Results: a total of 41 healthcare professionals and 39 stakeholders from different disciplines and sectors were interviewed in the four countries. The participants acknowledged a lack of awareness of available resources and poor communication between the different support systems in the management of Parkinson's disease. To promote multiagency collaborations, the participants highlighted the need to organize services along the Parkinson's disease journey, patient involvement and strategic involvement of carers in organizing resources and Parkinson's disease care pathways. According to the participants, the benefits from multiagency partnerships could lead to an enhanced continuity of care and specialized knowledge, mobilization of resources in the community, personalized support and improved access to services.

Conclusions: policymakers are called upon to create formal structures that facilitate multisectoral collaborations to promote an integrated system of care for the management of Parkinson's disease in the community. To address this challenge, we propose five strategies showing how organizations can work together to optimize the use of resources and enhance the management of Parkinson's disease throughout the illness trajectory.

Patient or Public Contribution
Patient and Public Involvement groups made up of stakeholders, healthcare professionals, patients with Parkinson's disease and family carers participated in the design of the study, the development of the interview guides and the validation of the findings.

Text
Health Expectations - 2022 - Soilemezi - Understanding support systems for Parkinson s disease management in community - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (1MB)

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 December 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 December 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474933
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474933
ISSN: 1369-6513
PURE UUID: 46724b84-9e49-433c-a6ef-668b643746dc
ORCID for Mari Carmen Portillo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1583-6612

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Mar 2023 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:37

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Dia Soilemezi
Author: Ana Palmar‐Santos
Author: M. Victoria Navarta‐Sánchez
Author: Helen C. Roberts
Author: Azucena Pedraz‐marcos
Author: Anita Haahr
Author: Dorthe Sørensen
Author: Line K. Bragstad
Author: Ellen G. Hjelle
Author: Silje Bjørnsen Haavaag

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×